Chapter 5

Transcription

Chapter 5
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Media and Culture
Although literature and the arts remain important cultural forms, popular culture—
television, movies, music, print media, and the Internet—also plays a significant role in
reflecting, reinforcing, and sometimes subverting the dominant systems and ideologies that
help shape gender. Popular culture is very seductive; it reflects and creates societal needs,
desires, anxieties, and hopes through consumption and participation. Popular culture also
provides stories and narratives that shape our lives and identities. It gives us pleasure at
the end of a long day and enables us to take our minds off work or other anxieties. In this
regard, some scholars have suggested that popular culture regulates society by “soothing
the masses,” meaning that energy and opposition to the status quo are redirected in pursuit
of the latest in athletic shoes or electronic gadgets.
Of course, popular culture creates huge multi-billion-dollar industries that themselves
regulate society by providing markets for consumption, consolidating power and status
among certain groups and individuals. Media conglomerates have merged technologies
and fortunes, consolidating resources and forming powerful corporations that control the
flow of information to the public. Over the last few decades globalization (those forces
integrating communities and economies into a global marketplace) has created global
media with powerful mass media corporations that both dominate domestic markets and
influence national governments. The Walt Disney Company, for example, is the largest
media conglomerate in the world with almost U.S. $50 billion in revenue and $5 billion in
profits in 2012. Disney is closely followed by Comcast with more than $4 billion in profits
and then Time Warner with almost $3 billion.
At the same time, corporations such as Disney spark resistance as women of color
and LGBTQ individuals, for example, respond to their absence and misrepresentation in
contemporary media. The FAAN (Fostering Activism and Alternatives Now!) Project is a
media literacy and media activism project formed by young women of color in Philadelphia.
They seek to critique and create media, with the goal of social change. Another organization is the Queer Women of Color Media Arts Project that creates, exhibits, and distributes
new films that reflect the lives of queer women of color and address vital social justice
issues that concern them. Blogs and zines, discussed below, and various online communities also provide feminist media activism, including cyberactivism, that seeks to empower
and change society. The reading “Cyberactivism and the Role of Women in the Arab
Uprisings” by Courtney Radsch is an example of this.
As emphasized in Chapter 4, popular culture plays a huge role in setting standards of beauty and encouraging certain bodily disciplinary practices. Popular culture is
culture for many people; the various forms pop culture takes help shape identity and
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guide people’s understandings of themselves and one another. This chapter addresses
such issues by focusing on the Internet and cell/mobile phone technology and their relationship to television, movies, the music industry, and print media. In this discussion
we emphasize issues of power and access, gender stereotyping, and obstacles to active
participation in contemporary media that include both technological (obtaining the hardware) and social aspects (knowledge and relationship to cultural norms about technology and who should use it, as well as literacy skills). The final section of this chapter
addresses literature and the arts.
DIGITAL TECHNOLOGIES
The Internet is a global system of interconnected private, public, academic, business, and
governmental computer networks that serve billions of users worldwide. These are linked
by electronic, wireless, and optical networking technologies and carry a wide range of
information resources and services, such as the World Wide Web and infrastructure to
support email. The Internet is central in enabling and accelerating interactions through
Internet forums, instant messaging, and especially social networking and the use of personalized services tailored to users. Most traditional communications media, including music,
film, and television, are being reshaped or redefined by the Internet, as are newspaper and
other print media, by blogging and web feed features, for example, often accessed through
mobile wireless technologies. Of course pornography and gambling industries have also
taken advantage of the Internet and provide a significant source of advertising revenue for
MAKING THE NEWS
A Guide to Getting the Media’s Attention
1. Have a clear message. Decide what you are calling for and keep repeating it
clearly and concisely. Don’t dilute strong arguments by going off on tangents
or harping on trivialities. Relate your cause to everyday concerns. For example,
if you’re campaigning for ethical investment, point out that it is financially
viable and has a positive effect on the world. If you speak calmly and appeal to
common understandings, radical ideas can appear not only sensible but even
obvious.
2. Make media a priority. Effective campaigning means making media engagement a priority. I have often seen activists organize an event and then think
about promoting it to the media. Put media at the center of your planning from
the beginning.
3. Offer news. Something is news only if it is new. Discussions of opinions are
not news—but you can make them news. When the University of London Union
campaigned on fair trade, they couldn’t make headlines simply by repeating its
benefits. But by conducting a survey that showed that London students were
among Britain’s most enthusiastic fair trade buyers, they made a good news
story. Don’t forget to be imaginative!
(continued)
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4. Watch your timing. If you are aiming for a weekly paper that goes to print on
Tuesday afternoon, don’t hold an event on Tuesday evening. Be where journalists are, both literally and metaphorically. It’s difficult to get journalists to come
to a protest outside a company’s offices, but if you demonstrate outside the
company’s big annual meeting, business correspondents will already be there.
Contact them in advance and there’s a good chance they’ll come over to speak
with you.
5. Talk to journalists. It sounds obvious, but it is often overlooked. Issue a news
release when you act or respond to events, but don’t rely on the release alone. Get
on the phone with the journalists who have received it. Be concise and brace yourself for disappointments—most of them will not be interested. But chances are
you will find someone who wants to know more eventually.
6. Build contacts. Go back to journalists every time you have a story, especially
those who seemed interested earlier. If you’re concise and reliable, and give
them good stories, they will soon be phoning you for comments. When this
happens, make sure that someone is available. A good relationship with a few
journalists is worth a thousand press releases.
7. Choose the right media. Who are you trying to influence? If you’re aiming to
shift local public opinion, the local press is, of course, vital. When the UK student
group People and Planet launched their Green Education Declaration, they targeted specialist education media. The news was read by fewer people than if it
had been in mainstream media, but that audience included the decision makers
whom the initiative was targeting.
8. Keep it human. A single death is a tragedy; a million deaths is a statistic. For
example, Disarm UCL is a group of students campaigning for an end to their
university’s arms investments. They discovered that a University College London
graduate named Richard Wilson had written a book about his sister’s death as a
result of the arms trade. By involving Wilson in their campaign, they made the
story more human and made it harder for their opponents to dismiss them as
inexperienced and unrealistic.
9. Make it visual. A good image can make or break your chances of coverage.
Photo stunts should be original and meaningful but not too complicated. A great
example is students who dressed in military jackets and mortarboards to illustrate military influence on universities. With photos of protests, be careful about
the background. I’m amazed how often people protest outside a shop or company without ensuring that the company’s name is visible in shots of the demonstration. Specialist media will often use photos provided by campaigners, so it’s
worth finding someone who’s good with a camera.
10. Keep going. Media liaison is hard work, especially when you are new to it.
But don’t give up! The more you do, the more contacts you will acquire and the
more coverage you will get. Keep your press releases and your phone calls regular. It will all be worth it when you see the coverage making a difference to your
campaign.
Source: Symon Hill, Utne, March–April 2009. Reprinted from Red Pepper.
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other websites. Although many governments have attempted to restrict both industries’ use
of the Internet, in general, this has failed to stop their widespread popularity.
As of this writing (and of all the chapters in this book, this is the one where knowledge
most quickly goes out of date), more than a third of the world’s approximate 7 billion people
have used the services of the Internet. Despite this scope, accessibility (to the Internet and other
media) is one focus of this chapter, as is the relationship of new technologies to imperialism and
global capitalist development. New media both support traditional imperialist practices as well
as provide opportunities for subversion and resistance through online communities organized
to improve the lives of marginalized people. Indeed, over the last couple of decades there have
been several global policy directives like the World Summits on Information Society (WSIS)
by, for example, the United Nations, the World Bank, and various nongovernmental organizations to improve women’s access to information and communication technologies generally.
In terms of expansion of global capitalist development, online shopping opportunities are
now challenging and in many cases surpassing traditional consumer behaviors with staggering
profits for major corporations. Much of this commerce relies upon the cheap labor of millions,
especially women, worldwide. Data mining allows companies to improve sales and profitability
by creating customer profiles that contain information about demographics and online behaviors. Cloud computing merges business with social networking concepts by developing interactive communities that connect individuals based on shared business needs or experiences.
Many provide specialized networking tools and applications that can be accessed via their websites, such as business directory and reviewing services. However, the Internet also provides
market opportunities for artisans and craftspeople (through websites such as etsy.com).
It is also important to note the environmental consequences of the marketing of these
technologies worldwide—especially in terms of “e-waste” and its relationship to global
climate change. Consequences of electronic production and use include: (1) raw material
extraction of nonrenewable natural resources, including coltan, a rare metal that is mostly
found in the Democratic Republic of Congo, where its mining is currently helping finance
a war; (2) material manufacturing that involves greater use of fossil fuels than other traditional manufacturing; (3) computer and accessory manufacturing, packaging, and transport
that involve extensive use of plastics and Styrofoam; (4) energy use to deal with the explosion of e-data generated, transmitted, and stored; and (5) despite recycling efforts, problems associated with the rapid obsolescence of electronic products containing toxic metals
that end up in landfills and pollute the earth and its water sources. A concern is that large
amounts of e-waste are sent to China, India, and Africa, where many unprotected workers are exposed to hazardous materials such as mercury and lead in the process of burning
electronics in search of copper and aluminum to resell.
An important feature of the Internet is that it allows greater flexibility in working hours
and location, especially with the spread of unmetered high-speed connections and tools
such as virtual private networks, Skype, and videoconferencing. The relatively low cost
and nearly instantaneous sharing of ideas, knowledge, and skills has increased opportunities for collaborative work nationally and transnationally. Such collaboration occurs in
a wide variety of areas, including scientific research, software development, conference
planning, political activism, and creative writing. Publishing a web page or a blog or building a website involves little initial cost and many cost-free services are available. However, “cyberslacking” has been identified as a drain on business and other organizational
resources. A 2013 report suggests the average employee who uses a computer at work
spends about an hour a day surfing the Web.
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The term Web 2.0 is commonly associated with web applications that facilitate interactive
information sharing, user-centered design, and collaboration. Web 2.0 sites provide opportunities for users to collaborate and interact as initiators of user-generated content in virtual communities. This can be compared to websites where users consume online content created for
them. Web 2.0 innovations include applications such as mashups, which use or combine data
from several sources to create new services, and folksonomies, or collaborative tagging or indexing, which allow users to collectively classify and find information. Most familiar applications
include blogs, wikis, video-sharing sites, hosted services, and social networking sites. Facebook, for example, the most popular social network service and website, has more than 1 billion
monthly active users (about one person for every 7 in the world) as well as 50 million pages and
10 million apps. Similarly Twitter and Tumblr offer social networking and microblogging with
millions of users. LinkedIn is a business-oriented site offering opportunities for professional networking with 200 million active users, Yelp is a business directory service and review site with
social networking features, and Flickr provides image and video hosting, creating an online community allowing users to embed images in blogs and social media. These technologies not only
rely on expensive hardware, but also, ultimately, on literacy, a key issue worldwide as women
are less likely than men to be able to access education, and thus are more likely to be illiterate.
Increasingly people access the Internet through mobile devices such as cell phones and
tablets. Currently about 90 percent of U.S. adults have cell phones and 55 percent of these
access the Internet through mobile smartphones (double the number just three years ago).
Overall, about a fifth of all people with cell phones use their phones as the primary or only
way they connect with the Internet. There are very few significant differences in terms of
cell and smartphone usage by gender or ethnicity, although older (older than 65-year-olds)
have lower rates. Of U.S. adults using smartphones, more than two-thirds access news and
social networking sites, and about a third upload photos, listen to online personalized radio
or other music, and play games. About 15 percent watch movies on their smartphones.
A 2013 study by the Pew Research Center found 78 percent of U.S. teenagers (younger
than 18 years) have cell phones and of those, almost half have smartphones. In addition,
three-quarters of teenagers (a significantly higher number than adults) access the Internet
using mobile devices. Teenagers and young adults represent the leading edge of mobile
connectivity, and the patterns of their technology signal future changes in the adult population. It is interesting, and frightening, to note that more people on earth have access to
mobile or cell phones than toilets. A recent study estimated that out of the world’s approximated 7 billion people, 6 billion have access to mobile phones. Far fewer—only 4.5 billion
people—have access to working toilets. Of the 2.5 billion who don’t have proper sanitation, more than 1 billion defecate in the open. Worldwide there are about a billion Google
searches and 2 billion videos viewed on YouTube daily.
Certainly these technologies are changing the ways we interact with each other
and how we anticipate friendship and community. A 2012 poll of multiple nations (that
included Brazil, South Korea, China, India, the United Kingdom, and the United States),
for example, revealed 84 percent of respondents saying they could not go a single day
without their cell phones and a fifth admitting they check their phone every 10 minutes.
Fifty percent of U.S. smartphone users in this sample said they slept with their phone
next to them like a teddy bear or a spouse (a number that includes more than 80 percent
of 18- to 24-year-olds). Is unlimited access to information and communication always
beneficial? Is the opportunity to have hundreds of friends on social networking sites helping us build community? The answers to such questions are complex and the case can be
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made that these devices are providing more knowledge at our fingertips, yet knowledge
that is unfiltered as well as voluminous and therefore more easily forgettable. Social networking sites provide opportunities for us to keep in touch with a broad range of people
in important ways, yet the case can be made that these are “faux friendships” without the
interpersonal intimacies of “real” face-to-face friendship. What are your thoughts on this?
Sherry Turkle, founder and director of the MIT Initiative on Technology and Self and
someone at the forefront of technological innovation, recently gave her opinion on the
future of social life in this rapidly changing time. We are “networked and we are together,”
she said. “But so lessened are our expectations of each other that we feel utterly alone. And
there is the risk that we come to see others as objects to be accessed—and only for the parts
we find useful, comforting, or amusing.” Scholars and clinicians have underscored her reservations with identification of various forms of Internet addiction disorder whereby excessive computer use interferes with daily life in relatively serious ways. Although Internet
users are more efficient at finding information and have developed strong visual acuity and
eye-hand coordination, these practices appear to interfere with deeper level thought related
to creativity. And, although cell phones are usually considered devices that connect people,
a 2012 study at the University of Maryland found that cell phone use for both women and
men reduced empathic and pro-social behavior (measured via willingness to aid a charity).
Researchers suggested that cell phone use evokes perceptions of connectivity to others,
thereby fulfilling the basic human need to belong and reducing the desire to indulge in prosocial behavior. The ultimate risk of heavy technology use is that it not only fragments our
life though multiple, diverse, and often superficial stimulation, but that it also diminishes
empathy by limiting how much people really engage (off-line) with one another.
More significantly, how are digital technologies changing our brains? What does it
mean for someone who has spent since birth, large portions of her or his day in front of
screens, interrupted constantly, and encouraged to juggle various streams of information?
Some scientists say without hesitation that juggling multiple sources of information and
responding to ongoing communication is changing how we think and behave. It appears
that the technology is actually rewiring the brain as neural networks continue to develop
through life. Scientists say our ability to focus is undermined by bursts of information
that stimulate (through a dopamine surge) the primitive impulse to respond to immediate
opportunities and threats. This is why people experience digital technologies as addictive
and feel bored or anxious when they are not “connected” to their devices. Along with
this surge comes stress hormones that also have powerful effects on the body. Educators
explain children have reduced attention span, difficulties focusing, and increased problems
with obesity as a direct consequence of the ways we structure life around digital devices.
Originally the Web was imagined as utopian spaces where gender, race, class, and sexuality were neutral forces or where alternative subjectivities could be performed. Although
this potential still remains, virtual realities tend to reinforce current social standards about
gender and other identities. This occurs in two ways. First, traditional standards are scripted
through gendered and racialized content supported by advertising, entertainment, and pornography. This “content” is saturated with traditional ideas about gender, downloading
music and videos, watching television shows and reading narratives about other people’s
lives and activities on social networking sites.
Advertisements accompany most websites and a large percentage of Internet traffic
is pornography related. Currently the worldwide pornography industry revenue is more
than U.S. $100 billion with about $14 billion in U.S. revenue (although these numbers
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are notoriously difficult to estimate). The pornography industry has larger revenues than
Microsoft, Google, Amazon, eBay, Yahoo, Apple, and Netflix combined. In addition,
pornography is often credited as fuel behind technological innovation and adoption.
For example, pornography companies were attempting to perfect video streaming long
before mainstream media in order to offer live sex performers that could be streamed
directly to consumers. Live chat rooms between pornography consumers and performers
also innovated much of the technology used today in other arenas. Today about a quarter
of all search engine requests and more than a third of all Internet downloads are pornographic in nature. Estimates include about 30,000 viewers of Internet pornography every
second with peak Internet pornography traffic during the work day between 9 am and
5 pm. Approximately a fifth of U.S. men admit to watching online pornography at work
and between two-thirds and three-quarters of men aged 18 to 24 years visit pornography
sites in a typical month.
Finally, of course, it is important to mention the levels of violence in online entertainment. Of particular concern are violent video games marketed to adolescent boys and the
relationship between these activities and teen violence. This concern has precipitated hearings in the U.S. House of Representatives to discuss the regulation of certain games that
depict the death, maiming, and harassment of people and animals. Violent video games
tend to glorify violence, desensitize individuals to suffering, and may legitimize and trivialize violence and hate crimes against marginalized groups.
Second, despite the fact that Internet technologies provide new opportunities and
help people connect across wide geographical expanses, these technologies are not
available to everyone. Social class limits access to all information and communication technologies, irrespective of gender. The speed with which technology evolves
or becomes obsolete (the “technology turnover” that pushes new gadget accessories
through the marketplace at astonishing speeds) exacerbates these issues of equity associated with Internet technologies. According to a study published in 2013, there are few
gender differences in Internet access in the United States, although in terms of usage
women are more likely to use it for communication (email, blogs, and fan following)
and participate in social networking sites. Men are more likely to use the Internet for
recreation. Women participate in more streaming content, whereas men downloaded
more. Men also have a higher use of Internet pornography and violent gaming, as discussed above. In this way, although in the global north a majority of women have access
to the Internet, it is still a contested site where girls and women may experience marginalization, discrimination, abuse, and/or disempowerment. Online predation of girls
and young women is an increasingly important problem as computers are installed in
children’s bedrooms and phones with Internet capabilities are owned by younger and
younger individuals, making the Internet a central feature of teen and preteen life. It is
estimated that one in five children is approached by an Internet predator, mostly through
social networking sites.
Although a global perspective on women’s access to the Internet reveals similar
gendered usage, there are important gender and class differences associated with access.
Where resources are scarce, the gap between those with resources, access, and skills, and
those without, grows. This means that because women as a group are limited by poverty
and lack of education, they are less likely to be able to access digital technologies. In addition, cultural differences also come into play as some communities encourage women’s
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access to the Internet and some do not. In this way, women’s access to media is limited by
socioeconomic factors as well as literacy and numeracy skills, and “user” characteristics
such as time constraints associated with family obligations.
Finally, at the same time that the Internet reinscribes power issues on multiple levels, as already mentioned, it provides opportunities for subversion and resistance. Its relevance as a political tool facilitating various forms of cyberactivism is now well known.
For example, recent U.S. presidential campaigns have been notable for their success in
organizing voters and soliciting donations through the Internet. Digital technologies are
also increasingly employed in resistance against standing regimes outside the United
States, as in the case of the 2012 Arab Spring uprisings. In particular, social networking
sites such as Facebook and Twitter helped citizens organize protests, communicate grievances, and share information. The reading “Cyberactivism and the Role of Women in the
Arab Uprisings” by Courtney Radsch focuses on Egypt, Tunisia, Bahrain, and Yemen and
explores how women used such media and employed citizen journalism to counter statedominated media. China’s attempts to censor and filter material on the Internet also reflect
the growing civic potential of online communities and cyberactivism generally. Indeed,
this activism is responding to the explosion of mass media globally that have grown with
the expansion of markets on local, national, and global scales. Media corporations have
grown stronger in their reach of audiences and in their ability to shape production and
distribution processes worldwide.
The content and organization of the Web also provides opportunities to dispute and
create new knowledge. Many women have fought to make a place for themselves in the
technological world, developing their own activist websites, blogs, and computer games.
LEARNING ACTIVITY
Analyzing Social Media
1.
Become a Twitter follower of a celebrity for a few days. Then complete a
gender analysis of her/his tweets: What issues are important to this celebrity? Who is the audience for the tweets? What is s/he trying to accomplish
with these tweets? How does this celebrity perform gender in these tweets?
Does s/he address gender issues in her/his tweets? Do the tweets reinforce or
challenge gender norms? Do you think tweeting can be an effective form of
feminist activism?
2.
Search for YouTube videos on a topic related to feminism. Watch a selection
of these videos and analyze them: Who is the intended audience? How does
the video frame feminist issues? What is the goal of the video? How does
the video make its argument? How would you assess the video’s contribution
to feminist dialogue? Can YouTube videos be an effective form of feminist
activism?
3.
Identify three feminist bloggers and read a selection of their blogs on feminist issues. Who is their audience? How do they construct their arguments
to reach this audience? What kinds of comments get posted in response to
their blogs? How effective do you think these blogs are as a form of feminist
activism?
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The reading in Chapter 13 by Moya Bailey and Alexis Pauline Gumbs on black feminist
blogging (“We Are the Ones We’ve Been Waiting For”) is also a case in point. Blogs
allow opportunities for citizen journalism that allows people to critique and provide social
commentary on their lives or the world around them. Blogging has also changed the face
of publishing. Although bloggers are not usually formally trained and may not have professional credentials, they have been able to publish their opinions or beliefs about any number
of subjects, appearing in school projects, on activism websites, and on political web pages,
often with accompanying video. Similarly, wikis are knowledge databanks in which any
user can add, edit, and create definitions for common words, concepts, histories, or biographies. It is important to note that though wikis can be good sources of common information,
they are not always accurate and should not be confused with academic databases! These
sites reflect a democratic construction of knowledge to which individuals can contribute (the
website Wikipedia is one example).
TELEVISION
Television is one of the most influential forms of media because it is so pervasive and its
presence is taken for granted in most households in the United States. Television impacts
family life because it encourages passive interaction, often replacing alternative family
interaction. In addition, television is a visual medium that broadcasts multiple images on
a continual basis in digitized, high-density formats. The ways people watch television,
however, are changing as viewers increasingly record shows rather than watch them in real
time, watch parts of shows in other formats (for example, YouTube), and view television
shows through computers and other mobile devices. However, although television viewing habits are increasingly diverse and fragmented, still these images come to be seen as
representing the real world and influence people’s understanding of others and the world
around them. This is especially significant for children because it is estimated that most
children, on the average, watch far more television than is good for them. Of course, the
range and quality of television shows vary, and a case can be made for the benefits of educational television. Unfortunately, educational programming is only a small percentage of
television viewing.
The explosion of cable and satellite availability has resulted in an unlimited number of
television channels. Such choice, however, has not meant greater access to a wide range of
alternative images of gender. Reality shows, and makeover shows, in particular, reinforce
dominant notions of gender and standards of beauty, as do entertainment shows such as
American Idol and The Voice. In addition, a host of shows such as Teen Mom and Pregnant
and Dating provide sometimes contradictory messages about the challenges and benefits
of unplanned pregnancies (although recent research suggests these shows may increase
contraceptive usage). Shows incorporating shame and humiliation can be said to “discipline” an audience even while they present other people’s misfortune as entertainment.
Ultimately they are engaged in the selling of products.
Advertising sponsors control the content of most commercial television. During male
sporting events, for example, the commercials are for beer, cars, electronic products, Internet commerce, and other products targeted at a male audience. During daytime soap operas
or evening family sitcoms, on the other hand, the commercials are aimed at women and
focus on beauty and household products. As a result, commercial sponsors have enormous
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influence over the content of television programming. If they want to sell a certain product,
they are unlikely to air the commercial during a feature that could be interpreted as criticizing such products or consumerism generally. In this way, commercial sponsors shape
television content.
Television messages about gender are often very traditional, even when they are
attempting to capitalize on new trends. The popular show Modern Family is case in point.
Although it depicts a secure, loving gay couple, for example, it reinscribes many stereotypes about gay men. Similarly, while it also presents a very likeable Latina struggling to
cope with life in the United States, it supports stereotypes of the ditsy Latin woman in most
episodes. In fact, the assumed differences between the genders very often drive the plot of
television programming. The format of shows is also gendered. For example, daytime soap
operas focus on relationships and family and employ rather fragmented narratives with
plots weaving around without closure or resolution, enabling women to tune in and out as
they go about multiple tasks. Daytime soaps are only part of the story. Shows with drama
and overt sexuality such as the long-running Grey’s Anatomy target an evening audience,
as do crime and thriller shows such as Persons of Interest and NCIS. The popularity of the
historical drama Downton Abbey represents not only the interest in romance and intrigue,
fashion and stately homes, but a nostalgia for the past. Cable networks such as HBO and
AMC feature dramatic series such as Mad Men, another show set in the past, that garner
popular acclaim and then become profitable as boxed-set DVDs. Mad Men provides a
critique of corporate masculinity through its focus on men employed in a 1960s advertising agency. Similarly, popular series like Game of Thrones offer sexualized violence and
misogynous male characters alongside some dynamic female characters. Even Breaking
Bad, a show with high hopes from a feminist perspective, provided fodder for debate about
contradictory messages about gender. Scholars have pointed out that these shows reconcile
women to male-dominated interpersonal relationships and help enforce gendered social
relations. Others argue that these shows enable women viewers to actively critique blatant
male-dominated situations in ways that help them reflect on their own lives.
A similar analysis can be made of evening family sitcoms. Shows such as Modern
Family and The Good Wife are funny and entertaining because they are relatively predictable. The family or work group (as in The Office) is made up of characters with distinct
personalities and recognizable habits; each week this “family” is thrown into some kind of
crisis, and the plot of the show is to resolve that crisis back to situation as usual. Sometimes
LEARNING ACTIVITY
Talking About Talk Shows
Watch several television talk shows. Keep a journal describing the topic of the
show, the guests, and the commercial sponsors. How would you characterize
the host? What do you notice about the interactions among host, guests, and
audience? In what ways does gender operate in the shows? Do you think the
shows are in any way empowering for the guests, audience members, or television viewers? How do you think these shows reflect either dominant or subordinate American cultures? How do you think these shows contribute to public
discourse?
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it involves a group of roommates or neighbors as in the classics Friends, Seinfeld, The Big
Bang Theory, or New Girl. For the most part, the messages are typical in terms of gender,
race, class, and other differences, and they often involve humor that denigrates certain
groups of people and ultimately maintains the status quo. As already mentioned, reality
television is especially influential. The appeal of “reality” shows such as The Bachelor,
Survivor, The Biggest Loser, Hell’s Kitchen, and Jersey Shore rely on creative casting,
scripting, and editing to make the shows seem spontaneous, incorporating character traits
and personalities that viewers love to hate and adore. These shows also rely on a cult of the
celebrity, rampant in popular culture.
The Ellen DeGeneres Show and gay-themed decorating and personal styling shows
may have helped normalize gay life for the broader society even while they often relied on
traditional stereotypes. Some television specifically feature empowered LGBTQ characters such as Pam De Beaufort and Tara Thornton in True Blood, Callie Torres and Arizona
Robbins in Grey’s Anatomy, and other LQBTQ mainstays in such shows as The Good
Wife, The New Normal, Lost Girl, and Lip Service.
Increasingly, we are seeing shows and advertisements that resist traditional representations, or at least show them with a new twist. Empowering roles for women are actually
more likely to appear in television than in the movies because the former expects a female
audience, whereas the latter relies on young male viewers. In addition, changes in society’s
views of gender and other differences have made sponsors realize that they have a new marketing niche. Susan Douglas writes about the proliferation of empowered female characters
in the reading “Enlightened Sexism.” She points to such characters as Miranda Bailey, the
strong African American surgeon on Grey’s Anatomy; agent Scully on The X-Files, a white,
no-nonsense, smart character out to solve crime; and one of the most influential people in
the entertainment industry, Oprah Winfrey. Douglas makes the case for these representations
as fantasies of power that are especially seductive for girls and young women in that they
provide the illusion and post-feminist message that “all has been won.” Douglas explains
that such “enlightened sexism” embeds feminism into its representations and insists that
because women are now equal to men, it is okay and merely entertainment to present the old,
tired stereotypes under new glitter. Often, unfortunately, these new representations involve
the same old package tied up in new ways; typically they involve women and men resisting
some of the old norms while keeping most intact.
For example, although women are starting to be shown as competent, strong, athletic,
and in control of their lives rather than ditsy housewives or sex symbols, they still are very
physically attractive and are often highly sexualized. In the reading, “Don’t Act Crazy,
Mindy,” Heather Havrilesky discusses the trend for smart leading women in television
sitcoms to act like “volcanoes that could blow at any minute.” She recognizes this is televisionland’s shorthand for complicated, strong-willed women and makes the case for saner,
more authentic characters.
Glee is still a relatively popular evening television show that provides a gay-friendly
script and some empowering roles and messages about femininity while at the same time
featuring young women who are again physically attractive and often highly sexualized
even though they often portray high schools students. Other examples abound in crime
drama such as Law & Order: SVU and CSI. These shows provide strong, intelligent women
as primary characters, but at the same time these women fulfill the stereotypical standards
of beauty. They can track down criminals using forensic science and look gorgeous while
doing it. Unfortunately, most of the victims are female, too. Despite some empowered
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characters in shows like CSI, the focus on sexy female corpses ultimately associates
women, queer cultures, and sexual subcultures with traditional and shallow stereotypes,
negativity, and death.
Finally, news programs play an important role in shaping public opinion. Fox News,
for example, is known for its support of conservative political opinion. Media scholars are particularly interested in the relationship between political ideologies and news
media and especially the role of organizations like Fox News in supporting a conservative
Republican agenda. One of the most influential pundits shaping popular opinion is Rush
Limbaugh. With an estimated net worth of $350 million, Limbaugh is the outspoken,
ultra-conservative host of The Rush Limbaugh Show, an A.M. radio show about U.S. politics, although he is a personality with cross-over appeal to television. The reading, “The
New Networked Feminism,” by Tom Watson discusses the organized feminist response
to one of Limbaugh’s misogynous outbursts that resulted in a dozen advertisers and two
radio stations canceling his show. Satire news shows such as Jon Stewart’s The Daily
Show and Stephen Colbert’s The Colbert Report provide alternative, more liberal takes on
domestic and international news.
MOVIES
In her groundbreaking work on cinema, feminist film theorist Laura Mulvey identifies the
“male gaze” as a primary motif for understanding gender in filmmaking. Mulvey argues
that movies are essentially made through and for the male gaze and fulfill a voyeuristic
desire for men to look at women as objects. Viewers are encouraged to “see” the movie
through the eyes of the male protagonist who carries the plot forward. In other words, the
focus is on the production of meaning in a film (including television and digital media),
how it imagines a viewing subject, and the ways the mechanisms of cinematic production
shape the representation of women and marginalized others, reinforcing intersecting systems of inequality and privilege. Mulvey makes the point that traditional feminine subjects
in film are bearers of meaning not meaning making. Meaning making in Hollywood tends
to incorporate heteronormative (centering of heterosexuality) themes that reinforce gender
ranking through such genres as gangster films, action films, and westerns that celebrate
heterosexual masculine power (with exceptions, of course, such as Brokeback Mountain).
In other words, these films portray heterosexuality as the dominant theme representing
masculinities.
Some feminist scholars have suggested the possibility for “subversive gazing” by
viewers who refuse to gaze the way filmmakers expect and by making different kinds of
movies. A key aspect of this criticism is recognizing the way identities are constructed and
performed (in everyday life as well as in the movies) rather than essentialist and intrinsic
to people. Coming from a black feminist perspective, bell hooks writes about the “oppositional gaze,” encouraging women of color in film to reject stereotypical representations
in film and actively critique them. In addition, film theorists are increasingly taking global
or transnational perspectives, responding to critiques of Eurocentrism or the centering of a
white, European, as well as straight and economically privileged perspective that has traditionally excluded disparate approaches across class, racial, and ethnic groups throughout the world. The Bollywood film genre, for example, a Hindi-language film industry in
India, demonstrates the popularity of non-“Western” consciousness. Feminist film theorists
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such as Claire Johnson, hooks, and Mulvey emphasize that alternative (to traditional
Hollywood) films can function as “counter cinema” by integrating alternative cinematic forms
and images and by putting women and other marginalized people in charge of directing and
producing films. Finally, the integration of lesbian/gay/queer politics in film attempts to
destabilize traditional Hollywood themes. For example, the Queer Film Society, a consortium of LGBT film critics, historians, artists, and scholars, focuses on the production and
celebration of queer images in world cinema. One of their mottos is “We’re here, we’re
queer, we’re watching movies.”
Probably the best genre of film in which to observe gender is the romantic comedy or
romantic drama. Romantic comedies have become the de facto film produced for female
audiences that shape notions of multifaceted femininities. Their heteronormative formula
reinforces myths about romantic love and marriage as the most important keys to women’s
happiness. This popular and seductive genre sometimes contains glimpses challenging
heteropatriarchy (such as the blockbuster film He’s Just Not That Into You). These films
are packed with subtle and not-so-subtle notions of gender. For example, the now classic movie Pretty Woman is a contemporary retelling of the Cinderella story, in which a
young woman waits for her Prince Charming to rescue her from her undesirable situation.
In this case, the prostitute-with-a-heart-of-gold is swept away in a white limousine by the
older rich man who procured her services and then fell in love with her. Some films like
Enchanted are trying to challenge the idea that all women need to be saved by a handsome
prince. The Shrek series of movies satirizes traditional fairy tale elements, with the princess
choosing to become an ogre and exhibiting her own sense of self and agency. Yet even
these films that seem to challenge masculinist assumptions still often reproduce patriarchal
understandings. So while Fiona in Shrek forsakes traditional femininity, she still embraces
the roles of wife and mother as the ultimate goals for women.
Other genres of films are also revealing in terms of norms about gender. Slasher films
and horror movies are often spectacular in terms of their victimization of women. The killers in these movies, such as Norman Bates in the classic Psycho (a spin-off television show
in 2013, Bates Motel, capitalizes on this plot and reveals his ambiguous childhood psyche),
are often sexually disturbed and hound and kill women who arouse them. This is also the
subtext of other old films such as The Texas Chainsaw Massacre movies and Prom Night.
LEARNING ACTIVITY
Women Make Movies
Very often the subjects that are important to women are ignored in popular
filmmaking or are distorted by stereotypes or the male gaze. Despite lack of
funding and major studio backing, independent women filmmakers worldwide
persist in documenting the wide range of women’s lives and experiences.
Visit the website of Women Make Movies at www.wmm.com. Browse the catalog
and identify movies made by filmmakers outside the United States. What themes
do they pursue? Are these themes also common in American women filmmakers’
movies? In what ways do they also express cultural distinctions? How do these
films differ from mainstream box office releases? Why is an organization like
Women Make Movies important?
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Often it is sexually active couples who are killed, either after sex or in anticipation of it.
Another plot of horror movies is the crazed and demanding mother who drives her offspring to psychosis, as in Carrie, where the mother gives birth to the spawn of Satan. The
“final girl” trope is also a staple of slasher films. She is the last girl left alive, the one who
confronts the killer and presumably lives to tell the story. She’s seen in classic films such
as Halloween, Friday the 13th, Scream, A Nightmare on Elm Street, and Hatchet. Although
both women and men claim to be entertained by these films, it is important to talk about the
messages they portray about men, about women, and about the normalization of violence.
Pornography is an extreme example of the male gaze and the normalization of violence against women (discussed in Chapter 10). With its print media counterpart, pornography extends the sexualization and objectification of women’s bodies for entertainment. In
pornographic representations, women are often reduced to body parts and are shown deriving pleasure from being violated and dominated. Additionally, racism intersects with sexism
in pornography when women of color are portrayed as the “exotic other” and are fetishized
and portrayed in especially demeaning and animalistic ways. Although many feminists, ourselves included, oppose pornography, others, especially those described as “sex radicals,”
feel that pornography can be a form of sexual self-expression for women. They argue that
women who participate in the production of pornography are taking control of their own
sexuality and are profiting from control of their own bodies.
Advertisers have targeted young girls with stripper and porn-inspired merchandise
that creates a very narrow definition of what constitutes sexiness for women. Such pressures encourage young women to identify with this objectification and sexualization and
confuse it with notions of self-empowerment. As already discussed, young people often
follow celebrity blogs that feature gossip and photos about their favorite movie and
music celebrities. Although this “cult of the celebrity” is not something new in popular
culture, the growth of the Internet has facilitated public fascination with famous people
and also encourages young people to seek their few minutes of fame. It has been suggested that this celebration of fame not only shapes young people’s ideas about self and
body with unrealistic expectations, but has also facilitated the growth and interest in
reality television.
Some of the more pervasive and lasting gender images in U.S. culture derive from
Walt Disney feature films. As mentioned, Disney Corporation is the number one media
conglomerate in the world in terms of revenue created. A key source of their profits lies in
the fact that Disney heroines live not only on the big screen, but also as dolls in little girls’
rooms, on their sheets and curtains, and on their lunchboxes and clothes. On the whole,
Disney characters reflect white, middle-class, heteropatriarchal, and imperialist norms.
More recent representations in Disney movies have attempted to be more inclusive, but
still rely largely on these traditional norms. For example, new Disney heroines are empowered to make choices for themselves, but still tend to be represented in sexualized ways
with Anglo features.
As women have made societal gains, Hollywood filmmaking has changed and become
more inclusive of new norms about gender and other forms of social difference. Indeed,
as Susan Douglas explains in the reading “Enlightened Sexism,” film media contain multiple images of female empowerment and gay-friendly narratives. Douglas asks why these
images of female empowerment are not aligned with the realities of most women’s lives
and makes the case for a seductive appropriation of feminism for corporate gain. These
empowered characters are more likely to be white and economically privileged at the same
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time that narratives about them tend to rely on heterosexual romance. Notice also the dearth
of people of color or LGBQT characters in leading roles in most films. Bringing a critical
eye to the movies we watch helps us notice how films play a role in maintaining privilege
and moves us from being passive recipients of the movies’ message to active viewers who
can offer informed analysis.
One of the biggest contemporary movie hits is the Twilight Saga: screenplays based
upon novels by Stephanie Meyer. A case can be made that the movies provide examples of
subversions of traditional gender and complex messages about female power and agency.
However, as Alison Happel and Jennifer Esposito suggest in the reading “Vampires and
Vixens,” the movies sexualize violence with potentially negative consequences for teenage
girls. The major theme of the movies, for example, concerns a girl’s love for a boy who
wants to kill her. Even though he tells her to avoid him, the main character, Bella, repeatedly risks violence through her pursuit of him. Happel and Esposito emphasize that Bella’s
body language is especially sexual in violent scenes. Another very popular young-adult
novel turned movie is Suzanne Collins’s book The Hunger Games. Declared a feminist
narrative in its representation of a strong black girl in pursuit of social justice, the movie
also shows the main character, Katniss, clever and competent with qualities usually given
to boys, who risks death to save her sister and another girl child. She appears as the opposite to Bella of Twilight in that she is not love-obsessed, and unlike Hermione of the Harry
Potter series, she is the lead character and not the sidekick. Still, despite these credentials,
it is noted that Katniss makes few decisions of her own, is still protected by men, and
blessed with lucky accidents; and when things get impossible, there are packages from
the sky. Some critics have also noted that it is a prime example of a cultural product that
should not be assumed to be feminist simply because it has a female creator and female
protagonist. If you have read or watched The Hunger Games, what do you think?
CONTEMPORARY MUSIC AND MUSIC VIDEOS
Popular music genres such as rock, grunge, punk, metal, techno, and hip-hop are contemporary cultural forms targeted at youth. Often this music offers resistance to traditional
cultural forms and contains a lot of teenage angst attractive to young people who are figuring out who they are in relation to their parents and other adults in positions of authority
in their lives. In this way, such music serves as contemporary resistance and can work to
mobilize people politically. Certainly music functions to help youth shape notions of identity. The various musical forms offer different kinds of identities from which people can
pick and choose to sculpt their own sense of self. In this way, music has played, and continues to play, a key role in the consolidation of youth cultures in society. There is a huge
music industry in the United States, and it works in tandem with television, film, video,
radio, and, of course, advertising. The Internet and personalized music devices like the
iPod and iTunes allow people to download music and create their own personalized collections rather than purchasing complete CDs. Similarly, personalized radio like Pandora and
Slacker allows individuals to indicate and provide feedback on a song or artist they like and
the service responds by playing selections that are musically similar. These technologies
have changed industries and listening practices.
Just as rock music was an essential part of mobilizing the youth of the 1960s to rebel
against traditional norms, oppose the war, and work for civil rights, hip-hop music and
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culture has been influential in recent decades as a critique of racial cultural politics. Originating in African American urban street culture of the late 1970s, rap was influenced by
rhythm and blues and rock and quickly spread beyond its roots into television, fashion,
film, and, in particular, music videos. At the same time that the rap music industry has been
able to raise the issue of racism, poverty, and social violence in the context of its endorsement of black nationalism, rap has also perpetuated misogyny and violence in its orientation and musical lyrics. There are women performers in hip-hop and new female rappers
are receiving much more attention, but their status in the industry is far below that of male
bands. Aya de Leon reflects on this in her poem “If Women Ran Hip Hop.” Women’s success in hip-hop is illustrated by the success of such artists as Queen Latifah, Lil’ Kim, and
Missy Elliot. Elliott in particular is known not only as a writer and performer but also as a
producer of other artists’ music. These women continue in the footsteps of blues and soul
artists such as Billie Holiday, Aretha Franklin, and Etta James.
About 30 years after the advent of rock music, the combination of music with visual
images gave rise to the music video genre, which gained immense popularity in the 1980s
with the prominence of MTV, a music video station that has now branched into specialized programming. Music videos are unique in blending television programming with
commercials such that while the viewer is actually watching a commercial, the illusion
is of programmatic entertainment. Music videos are essentially advertisements for record
company products and focus on standard rock music, although different musical genres
like country-western also have their own video formatting. Most music videos are fairly
predictable in the ways they sexualize women, sometimes in violent ways. As in movies,
women are generally present in music videos to be looked at. In fact, music videos featuring male musicians are aired in greater numbers than those featuring female musicians.
Nonetheless, we could also argue that the music video industry has allowed women
performers to find their voice (literally) and to script music videos from their perspective. This opportunity gave women audience recognition and industry backing. Music
videos also helped produce a feminine voice with the potential to disrupt traditional
gendered perspectives. At its peak in the mid-1980s, MTV helped such women as Tina
Turner, Cyndi Lauper, and Madonna find success. Madonna is especially interesting
because she was cast simultaneously as both a feminist nightmare perpetuating gendered
IDEAS FOR ACTIVISM
• Write letters to encourage networks to air television shows that depict the
broad diversity of women.
• Write letters to sponsors to complain about programs that degrade or stereotype women.
• Form a reading group to study novels by female authors.
• Create your own zine about a feminist issue that’s important to you.
• Sponsor a media awareness event on campus to encourage other students to
be aware of media portrayals of women. Use social media to promote awareness of women’s issues. • Create a YouTube video to promote your women and gender studies
program.
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stereotypes about sexualized women and an important role model for women who want
to be active agents in their lives. Lady Gaga (Stefani Germanotta) is similarly positioned as an icon who simultaneously supports and resists female sexualization. Both
Madonna and Lady Gaga have been regarded as returning the male gaze by staring right
back at the patriarchy. Similarly, Beyoncé, for example, has declared her feminism with
empowering songs like “Single Ladies (Put a Ring on It)” and Destiny’s Child’s classic
“Independent Women.” Sophie Weiner makes the case for Beyoncé as a celebrity who
furthers the cause of social justice in “Beyoncé: Feminist Icon?” Other artists like Christina Aguilera and Pink are also celebrated for being both sexual and assertively feminist
in much the same way.
Performing rock music has generally been seen as a male activity, despite the presence
of women rockers from the genre’s beginnings in the 1950s. The male-dominated record
industry has tended to exclude women rockers and tried to force women musicians into
stereotypical roles as singers and sex objects. But the advent of new, accessible technologies has allowed women greater control of their own music. Now, instead of needing a
recording contract with one of the big labels, an aspiring rocker can write, record, produce,
and distribute her own music. For years, independent artists sold most of their music out
of the back of a van, but now the Internet has made global distribution possible for just
about every musician—without a large budget, agent, manager, or record label. New technologies both inside and outside the music industry have provided more ways for women
to express themselves. Opportunities for self-promotion on YouTube and various social
networking sites have encouraged a new generation of women musicians. Musicians can
display their music and image for free with minimal effort. This allows them to break out
of expected norms and potentially avoid industry stereotyping. Online communities such
as GoGirlsMusic and Women in Music also support and help launch new artists.
Other strategies for independence include “indie” artists and bands whose music is
produced within networks of independent record labels and underground music venues that
emerged in the United States and elsewhere in the 1980s and 1990s. Indie is also seen as
a distinct genre of rock music with a specific artistic aesthetic that includes many female
artists. Singer-songwriters such as Ani DiFranco, the Indigo Girls, Tracy Chapman, and
Tori Amos were important in providing feminist music as also were the “riot grrl” feminist
punk artists and bands of the 1980s. Many of these artists continue to serve as role models
for young women seeking to gain a more independent place in contemporary music.
PRINT MEDIA
No discussion of popular culture is complete without a discussion of print media. These
mass media forms include magazines, newspapers, comic books, and other periodicals that
are usually simultaneously available online. Like other media, they are a mix of entertainment, education, and advertising. Fashion magazines are heavy on advertising, whereas
comic books tend to be geared toward entertainment and rely more on product sales of the
comic books themselves. Newspapers fall somewhere in between.
Women’s magazines are an especially fruitful subject of study for examining how
gender works in contemporary U.S. society. As discussed in Chapter 4, women’s magazines are a central part of the multi-billion-dollar industries that produce cosmetics and
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267
Looking Good, Feeling Sexy, Getting a Man
Collect a number of women’s magazines, such as Cosmopolitan, Vogue, Elle, Glamor, Redbook,
and Woman’s Day. Read through the magazines and fill in the chart listing the number of articles
you find about each topic. What do you observe from your analysis? What messages about gender
are these magazines presenting?
Magazine
Title
Makeup
Clothes
Hair
Sex/
Dating
Dieting
Food/
Home
Recipes Decoration
Work
Politics
fashion and help shape the social construction of “beauty.” Alongside these advertising campaigns are bodily standards against which women are encouraged to measure
themselves. Because almost no one measures up to these artificially created and often
computer-generated standards, the message is to buy these products and your life will
improve.
Generally, women’s magazines can be divided into three distinct types. First are the
fashion magazines that focus on beauty, attracting and satisfying men, self-improvement,
and (occasionally) work and politics. Examples are Vogue (emphasizing fashion and
makeup), Cosmopolitan (emphasizing sexuality and relationships with men), and Self
(emphasizing self-improvement and employment), although the latter two are also heavy on
beauty and fashion and the former is also preoccupied with sex. Most of these magazines
have a white audience in mind; Ebony is one similar kind of magazine aimed at African
American women. Note that there are also a number of junior magazines in this genre, such
as Seventeen, aimed at teenage women. However, although its title suggests the magazine
might be oriented toward 17-year-olds, it is mostly read by younger teenagers and even
preadolescent girls. Given the focus of teen magazines on dating, fashion, and makeup, the
effects of such copy and advertisements on young girls are significant.
The second genre of women’s magazines includes those oriented toward the family,
cooking, household maintenance and decoration, and keeping the man you already have.
Examples include Good Housekeeping, Redbook, and Better Homes and Gardens. These
magazines (especially those like Good Housekeeping) also include articles and advertising on fashion and cosmetics, although the representations of these products are different.
Instead of the seductive model dressed in a shiny, revealing garment (as is usually featured
on the cover of Cosmo or Glamor), Redbook, for example, usually features a less glamorous woman (although still very normatively beautiful) in more conservative clothes, surrounded by other graphics or captions featuring various desserts, crafts, and so forth. The
focus is off sex and onto the home.
The third genre of women’s magazines is the issue periodical that focuses on some
issue or hobby that appeals to many women. Parents magazine is an example of an issue
periodical aimed at women (although not exclusively). Ms. magazine is one aimed at
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HISTORICAL MOMENT
SI for Women
By Lindsay Schnell
Featuring a variety of male
athletes, marketed to men and
written (mostly) by men, Sports
Illustrated (SI) magazine has
never done a consistent job of
covering and featuring female
athletes. It’s easy to see why:
SI primarily covers professional
sports, and a small percentage of professional athletes
are women. For years, female
athletes struggled to get a fair
shake in media coverage, often
being touted more for their
looks than their abilities on the
playing field.
That all changed in the spring of
1999 with the debut of Sports
Illustrated for Women. Featuring teen basketball phenom
Seimone Augustus—who went
on to star at Louisiana State University and become the number-one pick of the 2006 WNBA draft—on its first cover,
SI for Women catered to female athletes of all ages and skill levels. The magazine
offered tips on eating like a professional athlete, previews of college and professional teams, in-depth features on known and unknown females making an impact
in the world of sport, and much more. One issue even had a sports horoscope for its
readers! SI for Women also had an answer to its parent magazine’s hottest-selling
issue annually: a swimsuit issue of its own, with male athletes showing off the bodies they had worked so hard for. Finally, women had a sports magazine just for
them that celebrated their athletic accomplishments instead of just their looks.
One of the earliest covers featured Julie Foudy, a member of the 1999 Women’s
World Cup soccer team. Foudy and her teammates became known across the
nation after a thrilling 5–4 shootout victory over China in the Rose Bowl for the
’99 Cup title. Brandi Chastain’s “shot heard ’round the world” and subsequent
act of ripping off her shirt and falling to her knees in ecstasy became one of the
most iconic sports images of the twentieth century.
Coupled with the success of the ’99 World Cup team, SI for Women helped
athletes like soccer great Mia Hamm and basketball superstar Sheryl Swoopes
become household names. Unfortunately, SI for Women wasn’t a hot seller on
the newsstands, and lasted just 18 issues. It folded in 2002, but in the two-anda-half years that SI for Women was in print it helped give a face—or faces—to a
generation hungry for strong female role models.
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In 2008 Winter X Games star Gretchen Bleiler told ESPN The Magazine, “It sucks.
When you’re a woman in sports, people want you to show some skin.” Though
it’s no longer in print, SI for Women helped prove female athletes didn’t have to
show skin to get some pub. And with female athletic participation at an all-time
high since Title IX was passed in 1972, is there any better news we can give to
our friends, teammates, sisters, and daughters?
feminists, as are Bitch and Bust. Examples of hobby-type periodicals include craft magazines on needlework or crochet and fitness magazines. There are many specialized issue
periodicals aimed at men (such as hunting and fishing and outdoor activities periodicals,
computer and other electronic-focused magazines, car and motorcycle magazines, and various sports periodicals). The best known of the latter is Sports Illustrated, famous also for
its “swimsuit edition,” which always produces record sales in its sexualization of female
athletes’ bodies (see the sidebar “SI for Women”). That there are more issue periodicals
for men reflects the fact that this group is assumed to work and have specialized interests,
and women are assumed to be preoccupied with looking good, working on relationships,
and keeping a beautiful home.
Again, as in music, technology has also provided a way for women to express their
voices through publishing. “Zines” are quick, cheap, cut-and-paste publications that have
sprung up both in print and online formats in recent years. These publications, which
range in quality, often provide a forum for alternative views on a wide variety of subjects,
WOMEN IN PRINT
by Nancy Barbour
Feminist consciousness-raising efforts in the late 1960s and early 1970s increased
women’s awareness that their personal experiences needed articulation in wider
sociopolitical contexts. Like their first wave sisters before them, second wave
feminists worked to spread their critical knowledge to greater numbers of
women by distributing newsletters and pamphlets. The now famous book Our
Bodies, Ourselves (1973), by the Boston Women’s Health Book Collective, began
as a 35-cent feminist pamphlet that aimed to demystify women’s health and sexuality. But the women’s movement faced resistance from mainstream publishers.
High-circulation magazines for “ladies” rejected feminist articles that addressed
issues of real concern to women. Instead, they often published advertising
“puffs”—articles that appear to be informative but are designed to sell an advertiser’s product. Feminists understood that these publications, while marketed
directly to women, were controlled and edited almost entirely by men. In 1970,
more than 100 feminists descended upon the offices of Ladies’ Home Journal and
staged an 11-hour sit-in. They demanded that the magazine hire women to
fill all editorial and advertising positions, that it hire a proportionate number of
(continued)
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non-white women at all levels, and that it cease publishing advertisements that
were degrading to women. The editor did not capitulate, but the August 1970
issue included an eight-page insert on “The New Feminism,” written by protesters. In 1973, LHJ hired a woman as editor-in-chief.
Feminists recognized that they could not rely upon the traditional publishing
industry to represent women’s interests and experiences. In the 1970s, a number of small, independent feminist presses were established across the United
States, some first operating out of homes and garages. Shameless Hussy Press,
The Women’s Press Collective, Out & Out Books, New Victoria Publishers, and
CALYX Press were among the first feminist and lesbian publishers that specialized in poetry, art, fiction, and nonfiction, predominantly by and for women.
Kitchen Table: Women of Color Press, started in 1980, was the first to be managed and run exclusively by women of color. Many well-known and widely published women writers were first discovered by independent feminist publishers.
Some of these presses are still operating. Others have disappeared in the wake of
domination by conglomerate corporate publishers.
Today, a handful of conglomerates controls 80% of the U.S. book market. Feminist publishers once relied upon independent women’s and lesbian bookstores
as their major retailers, but many of these stores were driven out of business by
chain sellers. Big chain bookstores collaborate with the publishing giants to dictate which books will be prominently featured and which are destined for obscurity. High-visibility spaces—at the ends of shelves and on tables near the entrance
and cash registers—are purchased by publishers to increase their books’ visibility
and sales. Small, independent, and nonprofit publishers rarely have the marketing
budgets to participate in these pay-to-display schemes. Their books are typically
relegated to bottom shelves in the far corners of chain bookstores—if the stores
carry them at all.
Feminist presses continue to strive toward strengthening the presence of women
writers in the literary canon. Visit these independent feminist publishers online,
join their mailing lists, and ask your favorite bookstores to carry their titles.
CALYX Press: Independent, nonprofit publisher of fine art and literature by
women from diverse backgrounds. www.calyxpress.org
The Feminist Press: Independent, nonprofit literary publisher that promotes freedom of expression and social justice. www.feministpress.org
Seal Press: Independent publisher of books about women’s health, parenting,
popular culture, sexuality, gender and transgender life, and much more.
www.sealpress.com
Cleis Press: The largest independent queer publisher in the United States.
www.cleispress.com
Aunt Lute Books: Multicultural women’s press, publishing literature by traditionally underrepresented women, especially women of color. www.auntlute.com
Spinifex Press: Independent Australian feminist publisher of feminist books with
an optimistic edge. Eighty percent of titles are also available as eBooks.
www.spinifexpress.com
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especially pop culture. As Alison Piepmeier notes in the reading “Bad Girl, Good Girl,”
zines provide an opportunity for young feminists to resist ideas in mainstream publications
that sustain women’s subordination. Piepmeier explores the ways zines have allowed girls
and young women to both critique and embrace girlishness and femininity. She suggests
zine authors focus on the pleasures of girlhood even while they critique racist, heteropatriarchal social structures. She discusses Bust magazine as an example.
LITERATURE AND THE ARTS
In the reading “Thinking About Shakespeare’s Sister,” Virginia Woolf responds to the
question “Why has there been no female Shakespeare?” Similarly, in the early 1970s,
Linda Nochlin wrote a feminist critique of art history that sought to answer the question
“Why have there been no great women artists?” Woolf and Nochlin reached very similar
conclusions. According to Nochlin, the reason there had been no great women artists was
not that no woman had been capable of producing great art but that the social conditions of
women’s lives prevented such artistic endeavors.
Woolf wrote her essay in the late 1920s, but still today many critics and professors of
literature raise the same questions about women’s abilities to create great literature. Rarely,
for example, does a seventeenth- or eighteenth-century British literature course give more
than a passing nod to women authors of the periods. Quite often, literature majors graduate
having read perhaps only Virginia Woolf, George Eliot, Jane Austen, or Emily Dickinson.
The usual justification is that women simply have not written the great literature that men
have or that to include women would mean leaving out the truly important works of the
literary canon (those written by white men).
In her essay, Woolf argues that it would have been impossible due to social constraints
for a woman to write the works of Shakespeare in the age of Shakespeare. Although women
did write, even in the time of Shakespeare, their works were often neglected by the arbiters
of the literary canon because they fell outside the narrowly constructed definitions of great
literature. For example, women’s novels often dealt with the subjects of women’s lives—
family, home, love—subjects not deemed lofty enough for the canon of literature. Additionally, women often did not follow accepted forms, writing in fragments rather than unified
texts. As the canon was defined according to white male norms, women’s writing and much
of the writing of both women and men of color were omitted. Jane Austen is still a popular
novelist despite having written her books two centuries ago. Her current popularity is based
in part on the dramatization of her work in a series of blockbuster movies as well as the fact
that Austen was both a romantic and a feminist. The still-relevant romantic plots in Austen’s
novels provide a foundation for her strong critique of sexism and classism. We include in
this chapter Emily Dickinson’s short poem “The Wife,” with its lament about the wife who
“rose to his requirement, dropped/The playthings of her life/To take the honorable work/Of
woman and of wife.” Writing in the mid-nineteenth century, Dickinson was very aware, as
women still are today, of the duties and expectations of women as they become wives.
Yet, toward the end of the twentieth century, more women began to publish novels
and poetry, and these have been slowly introduced into the canon. These works have dealt
with the realities of women’s lives and have received wide acclaim. For example, writers
such as Toni Morrison (who received the Nobel Prize for literature), Alice Walker, and
Maya Angelou have written about the dilemmas and triumphs faced by black women in
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Copyright © 2000 T.O. Sylvester. Sylvester is the pseudonym for Sylvia Mollick (artist) and Terry Ryan (writer).
They live in San Francisco.
a white, male-dominated culture. Annie Dillard won a Pulitzer Prize at the age of 29 for
her nature essays about a year spent living by Tinker Creek. Feminist playwrights such
as Wendy Wasserstein, Suzan Lori-Parks, Lynn Nottage, Migdalia Cruz, and Eve Ensler;
performance artists such as Lily Tomlin and Lori Anderson; and feminist comedians such
as Suzanne Westenhoffer, Tracey Ullman, Wanda Sykes, and Margaret Cho have also been
very influential in providing new scripts for women’s lives. Audre Lorde talks about the
importance of literature in “Poetry Is Not a Luxury.” She describes poetry as opportunity
to bring forth dreams, longings, and all that we dare make real. She implores us to speak
and write the truths of our lives.
Just as female writers have been ignored, misrepresented, and trivialized, so too
female artists and musicians have faced similar struggles. Women’s art has often been
labeled “crafts” rather than art. This is because women, who were often barred from entering the artistic establishment, have tended to create works of art that were useful and were
excluded from the category of art. Often, female artists, like their sisters who were writing
novels and poetry, used a male pen name and disguised their identity in order to have their
work published or shown. With the influence of the women’s movement, women’s art is
being reclaimed and introduced into the art history curriculum, although it is often taught
in the context of “women’s art.” This emphasizes the ways the academy remains androcentric, with the contributions of “others” in separate courses. Female artists such as Frida
Kahlo, Georgia O’Keeffe, and Judy Chicago have revitalized the art world by creating
women-centered art and feminist critiques of masculine art forms. Similarly, graphic artists
such as Barbara Kruger and mixed-media artists such as Jennifer Linton have incorporated
feminist critiques of consumerism and desire. Photographers such as Cindy Sherman and
Lorna Simpson have also raised important questions about the representation of women
and other marginalized people in media and society. Joyce Wieland has famously created
quilted art pieces using a traditionally feminine art form and Kiki Smith has sculpted feminist imagery focusing on bodily secretions such as blood and sweat. Finally, the “Guerilla
Girls,” an anonymous feminist group wearing gorilla masks, use the names of dead female
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ACTIVIST PROFILE
273
Maxine Hong Kingston
As a young girl, Maxine Hong
Kingston could not find herself
in the images in the books
she read. The public library in
her hometown of Stockton,
California, had no stories of
Chinese Americans and very few
that featured girls. For Kingston, this meant a significant
need and open space for the
telling of her stories.
Kingston was born in Stockton
in 1940 to Chinese immigrant
parents. Her mother was
trained as a midwife in China,
and her father was a scholar
and teacher. Arriving in the
United States, Tom Hong could
not find work and eventually
ended up working in a gambling business. Maxine was
named after a successful blonde
gambler who frequented her
father’s establishment.
Growing up in a Chinese American community, Kingston heard the stories of her
culture that would later influence her own storytelling. By earning 11 scholarships, she was able to attend the University of California at Berkeley, where she
earned a B.A. in literature. She married in 1962, and she and her new husband
moved to Hawaii, where they both taught for the next 10 years.
In 1976 Kingston published her first book, The Woman Warrior: Memoirs of a
Girlhood Among Ghosts. This story of a young Chinese American girl who finds
her own voice won the National Book Critics Circle Award. Kingston’s portrayal of
the girl’s struggle with silence was met with a great deal of criticism from many
Chinese men who attacked Kingston’s exploration of critical gender and race
issues among Chinese Americans.
Kingston followed Woman Warrior with China Men in 1980, which also won the
National Book Critics Circle Award. This book explored the lives of the men in
Kingston’s family who came to the United States, celebrating their achievements
and documenting the prejudices and exploitation they faced. Her 1989 novel,
Tripmaster Monkey: His Fake Book, continued her explorations of racism and
oppression of Chinese Americans. Although some critics have accused Kingston
of selling out because her stories have not reflected traditional notions of
Chinese culture, she has maintained her right to tell her story in her own words
with her own voice.
(continued)
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The Fifth Book of Peace, published in 2003, uses her personal tragedy of losing
her house, possessions, and an unfinished novel in the Oakland-Berkeley fire of
1991 as a metaphor for war. She asks repeatedly the questions “Why war? Why
not peace?” In 2006, she edited Veterans of War, Veterans of Piece, a collection of
essays written by survivors of war who participated in her healing workshops. She
published her memoir, I Love a Broad Margin to My Life, in 2012.
artists to highlight the ways women and people of color are disproportionately excluded
from the art world through posters, postcards, and public appearances.
The works of female composers and musicians (such as by Fanny Mendelssohn
Hensel and Clara Schumann) have also been ignored as barriers to female achievement in
this arena prevented recognition of their talents. Women of color faced almost insurmountable obstacles by virtue of both race and gender discrimination as well as the effects of
class. It was mostly economically privileged women who were able to devote themselves
to music. In 1893 Margaret Ruthven Lang was the first female composer in the United
States to compose a piece performed by a major American symphony orchestra. Contemporary women composers still face challenges despite achievements by such women as
Cynthia Wong, Yu-Hiu Chang, and Paola Prestini. Similarly, very few women have been
given the opportunity to conduct orchestras until recently with the debut of contemporary
female composers such as Marin Alsop, Emmanuelle Haïm, Julia Jones, Anu Tali, and
Xian Zhang. Nadia Boulanger was the first woman to conduct a symphony orchestra in
the early twentieth century and was known as one of the best music teachers of her time.
Women were limited in music by the gendered nature of certain musical instruments that
rendered them inappropriate for women. In fact, through the nineteenth century, only certain instruments such as the keyboard and harp were considered appropriate for women to
play, and, even today, women are still directed away from some instruments and toward
others. Despite these obstacles, they continue to produce literature and art and to redefine
the canon. As in other male-dominated arenas, however, women have had to struggle to
create a place for themselves. This place is ever-changing, providing women with opportunities for fame, empowerment, self-validation, and respect.
HISTORICAL MOMENT
The NEA Four
Chartered by the U.S. Congress in 1965, the National Endowment for the Arts
(NEA) provides funding for artists to develop their work. In 1990 Congress passed
legislation that forced the NEA to consider “standards of decency” in awarding grants. Four performance artists—Karen Finley, Holly Hughes, John Fleck,
and Tim Miller—had been selected to receive NEA grants, but following charges
by conservatives, particularly Senator Jesse Helms (R–North Carolina), that the
artists’ works were obscene, the NEA denied their grants. All but Finley are gay,
and Finley herself is an outspoken feminist.
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Finley’s work deals with raw themes of women’s lives. She gained notoriety for a
performance in which she smeared herself with chocolate to represent the abuse
of women. Latching onto this image, conservatives referred to Finley as “the
chocolate-smeared woman.” Her work is shocking, but she uses the shocking
images to explore women’s horrific experiences of misogyny, and she uses her
body in her performances in ways that reflect how society uses her body against
her will.
Hughes’s work explores lesbian sexuality, and, in revoking her NEA grant, thenNEA chairman John Frohnmeyer specifically referenced Hughes’s lesbianism
as one of the reasons she had lost her grant. Some of her performances have
included “Well of Horniness,” “Lady Dick,” and “Dress Suits to Hire.”
Following the revocation of their grants, the four sued the U.S. government,
and in 1992 a lower court ruled in favor of the plaintiffs, reinstating the grants.
The government appealed in 1994 and lost again. Then, in a surprise move, the
Clinton administration appealed the decision to the U.S. Supreme Court. In 1998
the Supreme Court overturned the lower court rulings and held that the “standards of decency” clause is constitutional. Since the ruling, the budget and staff of
the NEA have been slashed, and artists like Finley and Hughes must seek funding
from other sources to continue their performances.
If you’re interested in finding out more about feminism and censorship, visit the
website of Feminists for Free Expression at www.ffeusa.org.
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38
Thinking About Shakespeare’s Sister
Virginia Woolf (1929)
their own husbands, and when the husband had been
assigned, he was lord and master, so far at least as
law and custom could make him. Yet even so,” Professor Trevelyan concludes, “neither Shakespeare’s
women nor those of authentic seventeenth-century
memoirs, like the Vemeys and the Hutchinsons,
seem wanting in personality and character.” Certainly, if we consider it, Cleopatra must have had a
way with her; Lady Macbeth, one would suppose,
had a will of her own; Rosalind, one might conclude, was an attractive girl. Professor Trevelyan is
speaking no more than the truth when he remarks
that Shakespeare’s women do not seem wanting
in personality and character. Not being a historian,
one might go even further and say that women have
burnt like beacons in all the works of all the poets
from the beginning of time—Clytemnestra, Antigone, Cleopatra, Lady Macbeth, Phèdre, Cressida,
Rosalind, Desdemona, the Duchess of Malfi, among
the dramatists; then among the prose writers: Millamant, Clarissa, Becky Sharp, Anna Karenina, Emma
Bovary, Madame de Guermantes—the names flock
to mind, nor do they recall women “lacking in personality and character.” Indeed, if woman had no
existence save in fiction written by men, one would
imagine her a person of the utmost importance, very
various; heroic and mean; splendid and sordid; infinitely beautiful and hideous in the extreme; as great
as a man, some think even greater. But this is woman
in fiction. In fact, as Professor Trevelyan points out,
she was locked up, beaten and flung about the room.
A very queer, composite being thus emerges.
Imaginatively she is of the highest importance; practically she is completely insignificant. She pervades
poetry from cover to cover; she is all but absent
from history. She dominates the lives of kings and
conquerors in fiction; in fact she was the slave of
any boy whose parents forced a ring upon her finger.
. . . [I]t is a perennial puzzle why no woman wrote
a word of extraordinary literature when every other
man, it seemed, was capable of song or sonnet.
What were the conditions in which women lived,
I asked myself; for fiction, imaginative work that is,
is not dropped like a pebble upon the ground, as science may be; fiction is like a spider’s web, attached
ever so lightly perhaps, but still attached to life at all
four corners. Often the attachment is scarcely perceptible; Shakespeare’s plays, for instance, seem to
hang there complete by themselves. But when the
web is pulled askew, hooked up at the edge, torn in
the middle, one remembers that these webs are not
spun in midair by incorporeal creatures, but are the
work of suffering human beings, and are attached to
grossly material things, like health and money and
the houses we live in.
I went therefore, to the shelf where the stories
stand and took down one of the latest, Professor Trevelyan’s History of England. Once more
I looked up Women, found “position of,” and turned
to the pages indicated. “Wifebeating,” I read “was
a recognized right of man, and was practiced without shame by high as well as low. . . . Similarly,”
this historian goes on, “the daughter who refused
to marry the gentleman of her parents’ choice was
liable to be locked up, beaten and flung about the
room, without any shock being inflicted on public
opinion. Marriage was not an affair of personal
affection, but of family avarice, particularly in the
‘chivalrous’ upper classes. . . . Betrothal often took
place while one or both of the parties was in the
cradle, and marriage when they were scarcely out
of the nurses’ charge.” That was about 1470, soon
after Chaucer’s time. The next reference to the position of women is some two hundred years later, in
the time of the Stuarts. “It was still the exception
for women of the upper and middle class to choose
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Thinking About Shakespeare’s Sister | V I R G I N I A
Some of the most inspired words, some of the most
profound thoughts in literature fall from her lips; in
real life she could hardly read, could scarcely spell,
and was the property of her husband.
...
Be that as it may, I could not help thinking, as
I looked at the works of Shakespeare on the shelf . . .
it would have been impossible, completely and
entirely, for any woman to have written the plays
of Shakespeare in the age of Shakespeare. Let me
imagine, since facts are so hard to come by, what
would have happened had Shakespeare had a wonderfully gifted sister, called Judith, let us say. Shakespeare himself went, very probably—his mother
was an heiress—to the grammar school, where he
may have learnt Latin—Ovid, Virgil and Horace—
and the elements of grammar and logic. He was,
it is well known, a wild boy who poached rabbits,
perhaps shot a deer, and had, rather sooner than he
should have done, to marry a woman in the neighbourhood, who bore him a child rather quicker than
was right. That escapade sent him to seek his fortune
in London. He had, it seemed, a taste for the theatre;
he began by holding horses at the stage door. Very
soon he got work in the theatre, became a successful
actor, and lived at the hub of the universe, meeting
everybody, knowing everybody, practising his art
on the boards, exercising his wits in the streets, and
even getting access to the palace of the queen. Meanwhile his extraordinarily gifted sister, let us suppose,
remained at home. She was as adventurous, as imaginative, as agog to see the world as he was. But she
was not sent to school. She had no chance of learning grammar and logic, let alone of reading Horace
and Virgil. She picked up a book now and then, one
of her brother’s perhaps, and read a few pages. But
then her parents came in and told her to mend the
stockings or mind the stew and not moon about with
books and papers. They would have spoken sharply
but kindly, for they were substantial people who
knew the conditions of life for a woman and loved
their daughter—indeed, more likely than not she was
the apple of her father’s eye. Perhaps she scribbled
some pages up in an apple loft on the sly, but was
careful to hide them or set fire to them. Soon, however, before she was out of her teens, she was to be
betrothed to the son of a neighbouring wool-stapler.
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She cried out that marriage was hateful to her, and
for that she was severely beaten by her father. Then
he ceased to scold her. He begged her instead not to
hurt him, not to shame him in this matter of her marriage. He would give her a chain of beads or a fine
petticoat, he said; and there were tears in his eyes.
How could she disobey him? How could she break
his heart? The force of her own gift alone drove her
to it. She made up a small parcel of her belongings,
let herself down by a rope one summer’s night and
took the road to London. She was not seventeen. The
birds that sang in the hedge were not more musical
than she was. She had the quickest fancy, a gift like
her brother’s, for the tune of words. Like him, she
had a taste for the theatre. She stood at the stage
door; she wanted to act, she said. Men laughed in
her face. The manager—a fat, loose-lipped man—
guffawed. He bellowed something about poodles
dancing and women acting—no woman, he said,
could possibly be an actress. He hinted—you can
imagine what. She could get no training in her craft.
Could she even seek her dinner in a tavern or roam
the streets at midnight? Yet her genius was for fiction
and lusted to feed abundantly upon the lives of men
and women and the study of their ways. At last—for
she was very young, oddly like Shakespeare the poet
in her face, with the same grey eyes and rounded
brows—at last Nick Greene the actor-manager took
pity on her; she found herself with child by that gentleman and so—who shall measure the heat and violence of the poet’s heart when caught and tangled in
a woman’s body?—killed herself one winter’s night
and lies buried at some cross-roads where the omnibuses now stop outside the Elephant and Castle.
That, more or less, is how the story would run,
I think, if a woman in Shakespeare’s day had had
Shakespeare’s genius. . . .
This may be true or it may be false—who can
say?—but what is true in it, so it seemed to me,
reviewing the story of Shakespeare’s sister as I had
made it, is that any woman born with a great gift
in the sixteenth century would certainly have gone
crazed, shot herself, or ended her days in some lonely
cottage outside the village, half witch, half wizard,
feared and mocked at. For it needs little skill in psychology to be sure that a highly gifted girl who had
tried to use her gift for poetry would have been so
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thwarted and hindered by other people, so tortured
and pulled asunder by her own contrary instincts,
that she must have lost her health and sanity to a
certainty. No girl could have walked to London
and stood at a stage door and forced her way into
the presence of actor-managers without doing herself a violence and suffering an anguish which may
have been irrational—for chastity may be a fetish
invented by certain societies for unknown reasons—
but were none the less inevitable. . . .
But for women, I thought, looking at the empty
shelves, these difficulties were infinitely more formidable. In the first place, to have a room of her own, let
alone a quiet room or a sound-proof room, was out
of the question, unless her parents were exceptionally rich or very noble, even up to the beginning of
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the nineteenth century. Since her pin money, which
depended on the good will of her father, was only
enough to keep her clothed, she was debarred from
such alleviations as came even to Keats or Tennyson
or Carlyle, all poor men, from a walking tour, a little journey to France, from the separate lodging
which, even if it were miserable enough, sheltered
them from the claims and tyrannies of their families.
Such material difficulties were formidable; but much
worse were the immaterial. The indifference of the
world which Keats and Flaubert and other men of
genius have found so hard to bear was in her case not
indifference but hostility. The world did not say to
her as it said to them, Write if you choose; it makes
no difference to me. The world said with a guffaw,
Write? What’s the good of your writing? . . .
39
The Wife
Emily Dickinson (c. 1860)
She rose to his requirement, dropped
The playthings of her life
To take the honorable work
Of woman and of wife.
Or first prospective, or the gold
In using wore away.
It lay unmentioned, as the sea
Develops pearl and weed,
But only to himself is known
The fathoms they abide.
If aught she missed in her new day
Of amplitude, or awe,
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Rush Limbaugh and the New Networked Feminism
Tom Watson (2012)
So much for post-feminism.
The world of networked hurt that descended on
the spiteful media enterprise that is Rush Limbaugh
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revealed a tenacious, super-wired coalition of active
feminists prepared at a moment’s notice to blow
the lid off sexist attacks or regressive health policy.
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Rush Limbaugh and the New Networked Feminism | T O M
When Limbaugh called Georgetown University law
student Sandra Fluke a “slut” and “prostitute” in
response to her testimony before Congress on contraception costs, he may well have been surprised by the
strength of the response. But he shouldn’t have been.
At latest count, 12 advertisers and two radio
stations have pulled the plug on Limbaugh. Each
was effectively targeted on Facebook and Twitter
by an angry and vocal storm of thousands of people calling for direct action. The campaign was
almost instantaneous, coordinated by no individual
or organization, and entirely free of cost. Prominent feminist organizers told Forbes that it was
social media’s terrible swift sword, led once again
by Twitter and Facebook-savvy women, that dealt
Limbaugh the worst humiliation of his controversial career, and in many ways, revealed the most
potent “non-organized” organization to take the
field on the social commons in the age of Occupy
Wall Street and Anonymous.
“Given that much of the increased vocabulary
and awareness about gender in the national discussion comes through social media and from young
people, I think that instances like this one should
give those who claim that young people don’t care
about feminism pause!” says Rebecca Traister, a
contributor to Salon and author of the important
feminist history of the 2008 Presidential race, Big
Girls Don’t Cry. “Young people are the ones who
know how to use social media in this way, and look
at the kind of impact it’s having.”
“What’s most interesting to me is that in the
last two years or so specifically, women have been
leading the charge online to campaign for themselves against this kind of abuse, largely thanks to
advances in social networking,” said media technologist Deanna Zandt, author of Share This! How You
Will Change the World with Social Networking. ”In
the past, we’d have to wait for some organization
to take up the cause—create a petition, launch an
email campaign—and outside of traditional feminist
movement types, those campaigns rarely reached
widespread acceptance.”
“Women aren’t waiting to be told what to do or
which petition to sign, they’re just doing what we do
best: talking and connecting,” agreed Allison Fine,
senior fellow for progressive think tank Demos.
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It’s the next chapter in many ways to the story that
hit the public consciousness with the strong, active
online reaction to the Susan G. Komen Foundation’s
decision to cut funding to Planned Parenthood a month
ago. The response was quick, massive, and targeted.
My own social graph (on both Facebook and Twitter)
lit up like a summer fireworks display after sundown—
stirring conversation, concentration around hashtags
and shared media, and truly crowdsourced action.
“What we’re seeing right now is a continuation
of the networked response to the right-wing war on
women’s health that began with the Komen reaction
a few weeks ago,” said Fine. “It is across generations
and extra-organizational with individual women
using a variety of social media channels to connect
with other women and create their own protests.”
Yet it would also be a mistake to view the semiorganized reaction to Limbaugh as purely another
battle between left and right on the American political spectrum. While Limbaugh’s sexist words have
to been seen in the light of a Republican Presidential race that has, inexplicably, placed an opposition
to contraception and women’s health at the center of
its increasingly nasty public debate, the roots of El
Rushbo’s humiliation also run deeper than spectrum
ideology and political parties.
You can see those roots, for instance, in the
brilliantly-organized campaign in late 2010 against
two prominent liberal voices: filmmaker Michael
Moore and talk show host Keith Olbermann.
Feminist blogger Sady Doyle took Moore to task
for posting bail on behalf of WikiLeaks founder
Julian Assange after rape accusations brought by
two women in Sweden confined him to custody in
England, and her supporters battled both Moore
and Olbermann for being dismissive of those accusations and implying they were a set-up to derail
Assange’s exposure of U.S. government secrets.
Wrote Doyle in December, 2010 in a post that
ignited a firestorm: “We are the progressive community. We are the left wing. We are women and men,
we are from every sector of this community, and
we believe that every rape accusation must be taken
seriously, regardless of the accused rapist’s connections, power, influence, status, fame, or politics.”
Thousands of activists then used the #mooreandme
tag on Twitter to (successfully) demand apologies
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from Moore and Olbermann. That campaign disproves the assertion by Fox News political analyst
Kirsten Powers in the Daily Beast that “the real fury
seems reserved only for conservatives, while the
men on the left get a wink and a nod as long as they
are carrying water for the liberal cause.”
But Powers does indeed have a point that casual misogyny among men in the media rather easily
crosses ideological lines—and just as clearly, the
new feminist moment online is in part a strong and
serious pushback against a culture that divines a
narrow, almost forgiving attitude toward violence
and sexual assault against women. Among the
feminist bloggers from more recent generations,
tactics like the Slutwalk—and a strong effort to
expose a culture of violence to the light of day—
point to a renewed and yes, combative new stance.
On the left, when prominent figures like Assange
and Dominique Strauss-Kahn were accused of
sexual violence, a new network of women stood
ready to push back on political commentary that
seemed to excuse or invalidate the charges. Feminist blogger Lindsay Beyerstein wrote that the
target of these new protests was “the inaccurate
stereotype that rape is an uncontrollable frenzy
of lust that women provoke in men. That’s like
imagining all theft as an uncontrolled frenzy of
consumerism.”
When he used the word “slut” to describe Sandra
Fluke—linking the need for contraceptives to a kind
of rampant (and distasteful) sexual desire in women
that society shouldn’t pay for—Limbaugh casually
played the flip side of the classic “she asked for it”
defense of sexual assault. The Republican Party’s
most potent media figure may well have reckoned
that talk radio’s legendary reach and loyal conservative audience would easily sustain a few harmless
raindrops of outrage on the roof.
But he was (perhaps fatally) wrong.
There was a powerful, decentralized social venture lurking on the digital network—totally empowered and working with a toolset as potent as Clear
Channel’s microphones.
“I think the feminists were always out there, but
often isolated from one another or overwhelmed
by the amount of work to be done and lack of
time in a day,” says feminist writer Kate Harding.
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“Social media allows us to work together quickly
and publicly for something like a boycott or twitter
campaign—(mostly) without the distractions of
in-group politics or disagreement on any number
of other issues—and that creates an energy that
makes it feel so much more like a unified movement, even when people are still quite loosely
connected.”
Philanthropy measurement guru and social
ventures blogger Lucy Bernholz believes that the
immediate feedback loop of the social networks
drove both the Limbaugh and Komen protests—
even without visible leadership or a budget.
“The dynamics of the media are such that if
you’re engaged about something, be it Komen
or Limbaugh you can drive your action, measure
it, and add it into a larger effort,” said Bernholz.
“If something resonates, you pass it on. If it
doesn’t, you try something else. It’s like the supposed Facebook mantra ‘code wins.’ Everyone
who participates in these networked action can
see—and measure—immediately, what resonates
with others and they can work fromt here.”
Adds Kate Harding: “I think the public aspect
is really important. #mooreandme, the Limbaugh
boycott, the Komen/Planned Parenthood uproar
all worked because there was somewhere to
express ourselves visibly. Who knows how many
feminists were sending letters and making phone
calls over similar instances in the past? But without any way for an outside observer to measure
it, the target of a boycott or letter-writing campaign was never forced to acknowledge that criticism publicly. When your brand’s Facebook wall
is overtaken by feminist outrage, you can’t just
write it off as a few man-hating cranks and continue on as usual.”
After the 2008 campaign, Traister’s book painted
a rosy path for feminist organizing that seemed a
stretch at the time, at least to me. In Hillary Clinton‘s
failed campaign, she wrote, “women’s liberation
movement found thrilling new life.”
Yet her words now seem prophetic—and indeed,
the sheer breadth and strength of the wired feminist
network is impressive.
“Some of what we’re seeing now feels more
coordinated in a way that fits with a maturation and
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Poetry Is Not a Luxury | A U D R E
increased confidence of online activism and with a
media that, post-2008, is better trained to hear and
report on this kind of response,” says Traister. “That
last part really matters, and is really relevant coming
out of 2008: There is an increased sensitivity around
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gender and around race and around sexuality that I
think was not part of the national conversation ten or
even five years ago.
“That makes a difference when Rush Limbaugh
calls someone a slut in 2012.”
41
Poetry Is Not a Luxury
Audre Lorde (1982)
The quality of light by which we scrutinize our
lives has direct bearing upon the product which we
live, and upon the changes which we hope to bring
about through those lives. It is within this light that
we form those ideas by which we pursue our magic
and make it realized. This is poetry as illumination,
for it is through poetry that we give name to those
ideas which are—until the poem—nameless and
formless, about to be birthed, but already felt. That
distillation of experience from which true poetry
springs births thought as dream births concept, as
feeling births idea, as knowledge births (precedes)
understanding.
As we learn to bear the intimacy of scrutiny and
to flourish within it, as we learn to use the products
of that scrutiny for power within our living, those
fears which rule our lives and form our silences
begin to lose their control over us.
For each of us as women, there is a dark place
within, where hidden and growing our true spirit
rises, “beautiful/and tough as chestnut/stanchions
against (y)our nightmare of weakness/”1 and of
impotence.
These places of possibility within ourselves are
dark because they are ancient and hidden; they have
survived and grown strong through that darkness.
Within these deep places, each one of us holds an
incredible reserve of creativity and power, of unexamined and unrecorded emotion and feeling. The
woman’s place of power within each of us is neither
white nor surface; it is dark, it is ancient, and it is deep.
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When we view living in the european mode only
as a problem to be solved, we rely solely upon our
ideas to make us free, for these were what the white
fathers told us were precious.
But as we come more into touch with our own
ancient, noneuropean consciousness of living as a situation to be experienced and interacted with, we learn
more and more to cherish our feelings, and to respect
those hidden sources of our power from where true
knowledge and, therefore, lasting action comes.
At this point in time, I believe that women carry
within ourselves the possibility for fusion of these
two approaches so necessary for survival, and we
come closest to this combination in our poetry.
I speak here of poetry as a revelatory distillation
of experience, not the sterile word play that, too
often, the white fathers distorted the word poetry to
mean—in order to cover a desperate wish for imagination without insight.
For women, then, poetry is not a luxury. It is a
vital necessity of our existence. It forms the quality
of the light within which we predicate our hopes and
dreams toward survival and change, first made into
language, then into idea, then into more tangible
action. Poetry is the way we help give name to the
nameless so it can be thought. The farthest horizons
of our hopes and fears are cobbled by our poems,
carved from the rock experiences of our daily lives.
As they become known to and accepted by us, our
feelings and the honest exploration of them become
sanctuaries and spawning grounds for the most radical
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and daring of ideas. They become a safe-house for
that difference so necessary to change and the conceptualization of any meaningful action. Right now,
I could name at least ten ideas I would have found
intolerable or incomprehensible and frightening,
except as they came after dreams and poems. This is
not idle fantasy, but a disciplined attention to the true
meaning of “it feels right to me.” We can train ourselves to respect our feelings and to transpose them
into a language so they can be shared. And where that
language does not yet exist, it is our poetry which
helps to fashion it. Poetry is not only dream and
vision; it is the skeleton architecture of our lives. It
lays the foundations for a future of change, a bridge
across our fears of what has never been before.
Possibility is neither forever nor instant. It is not
easy to sustain belief in its efficacy. We can sometimes work long and hard to establish one beachhead
of real resistance to the deaths we are expected to live,
only to have that beachhead assaulted or threatened
by those canards we have been socialized to fear, or
by the withdrawal of those approvals that we have
been warned to seek for safety. Women see ourselves
diminished or softened by the falsely benign accusations of childishness, of nonuniversality, of changeability, of sensuality. And who asks the question:
Am I altering your aura, your ideas, your dreams, or
am I merely moving you to temporary and reactive
action? And even though the latter is no mean task, it
is one that must be seen within the context of a need
for true alteration of the very foundations of our lives.
The white fathers told us: I think, therefore I am.
The Black mother within each of us—the poet—
whispers in our dreams: I feel, therefore I can be
free. Poetry coins the language to express and charter this revolutionary demand, the implementation
of that freedom.
However, experience has taught us that action in
the now is also necessary, always. Our children cannot dream unless they live, they cannot live unless
they are nourished, and who else will feed them
the real food without which their dreams will be no
different from ours? “If you want us to change the
world someday, we at least have to live long enough
to grow up!” shouts the child.
Sometimes we drug ourselves with dreams of
new ideas. The head will save us. The brain alone
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will set us free. But there are no new ideas still waiting in the wings to save us as women, as human.
There are only old and forgotten ones, new combinations, extrapolations and recognitions from within
ourselves—along with the renewed courage to try
them out. And we must constantly encourage ourselves and each other to attempt the heretical actions
that our dreams imply, and so many of our old ideas
disparage. In the forefront of our move toward
change, there is only poetry to hint at possibility
made real. Our poems formulate the implications of
ourselves, what we feel within and dare make real
(or bring action into accordance with), our fears, our
hopes, our most cherished terrors.
For within living structures defined by profit, by
linear power, by institutional dehumanization, our
feelings were not meant to survive. Kept around as
unavoidable adjuncts or pleasant pastimes, feelings
were expected to kneel to thought as women were
expected to kneel to men. But women have survived.
As poets. And there are no new pains. We have felt
them all already. We have hidden that fact in the
same place where we have hidden our power. They
surface in our dreams, and it is our dreams that point
the way to freedom. Those dreams are made realizable through our poems that give us the strength and
courage to see, to feel, to speak, and to dare.
If what we need to dream, to move our spirits
most deeply and directly toward and through promise, is discounted as a luxury, then we give up the
core—the fountain—of our power, our womanness;
we give up the future of our worlds.
For there are no new ideas. There are only new
ways of making them felt—of examining what
those ideas feel like being lived on Sunday morning at 7 a.m., after brunch, during wild love, making war, giving birth, mourning our dead—while we
suffer the old longings, battle the old warnings and
fears of being silent and impotent and alone, while
we taste new possibilities and strengths.
NOTE
1. From “Black Mother Woman,” first published in From
a Land Where Other People Live (Broadside Press,
Detroit, 1973), and collected in Chosen Poems: Old
and New (W. W. Norton and Company, New York,
1982), p. 53.
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42
Enlightened Sexism
Susan Douglas (2010)
How do we square the persistence of female inequality with all those images of female power we have
seen in the media—the hands-on-her-hips, don’teven-think-about-messing-with-me Dr. Bailey on
Grey’s Anatomy, or S. Epatha Merkerson as the
take-no-prisoners Lieutenant Anita Van Buren on
Law & Order, Agent Scully on The X-Files, Brenda
Leigh Johnson as “the chief” on The Closer, C.C.H.
Pounder on The Shield, or even Geena Davis as
the first female president in the short-lived series
Commander in Chief? Advertisements tell women
that they have achieved so much they should celebrate by buying themselves their own diamond
ring for their right hand and urge their poor, flaccid
husbands, crippled by an epidemic of emasculation
and erectile dysfunction, to start mainlining Viagra
or Cialis. Indeed, in films from Dumb and Dumber
(1994) to Superbad (2007), guys are hopeless losers.
In Sex and the City, with its characters who were
successful professionals by day and Kama Sutra
masters by night, there was no such thing as the double standard: women had as much sexual freedom,
and maybe even more kinky sex, than men. Cosmo
isn’t for passive girls waiting for the right guy to
find them; it’s the magazine for the “Fun, Fearless
Female” who is also proud to be, as one cover put
it, a “Sex Genius.” Have a look at O! The magazine
is one giant, all-encompassing, throbbing zone of
self-fulfillment for women where everything from
pillows to celadon-colored notebooks (but only if
purchased and used properly) are empowering and
everything is possible. And why not? One of the
most influential and successful moguls in the entertainment industry is none other than Oprah Winfrey
herself.
Something’s out of whack here. If you immerse
yourself in the media fare of the past ten to fifteen
years, what you see is a rather large gap between
how the vast majority of girls and women live their
lives, the choices they are forced to make, and what
they see—and don’t see—in the media. Ironically,
it is just the opposite of the gap in the 1950s and
’60s, when images of women as Watusi-dancing
bimbettes on the beach or stay-at-home housewives
who needed advice from Mr. Clean about how to
wash a floor obscured the exploding number of
women entering the workforce, joining the Peace
Corps, and becoming involved in politics. Back
then the media illusion was that the aspirations of
girls and women weren’t changing at all when they
were. Now, the media illusion is that equality for
girls and women is an accomplished fact when it
isn’t. Then the media were behind the curve; now,
ironically, they’re ahead. Have girls and women
made a lot of progress since the 1970s? You bet.
Women’s college basketball, for example—its
existence completely unimaginable when I was in
school—is now nationally televised, and vulgar,
boneheaded remarks about the players can get even
a money machine like Don Imus fired, if only temporarily. But now we’re all district attorneys, medical residents, chiefs of police, or rich, blond, So-Cal
heiresses? Not so much.
Since the early 1990s, much of the media have
come to overrepresent women as having made it—
completely—in the professions, as having gained
sexual equality with men, and having achieved a level
of financial success and comfort enjoyed primarily by the Tiffany’s-encrusted doyennes of Laguna
Beach. At the same time, there has been a resurgence
of retrograde dreck clogging our cultural arteries—
The Man Show, Maxim, Girls Gone Wild.1 But even
this fare, which insists that young women should
dress like strippers and have the mental capacities
of a vole, was presented as empowering, because
while the scantily clad or bare-breasted women may
have seemed to be objectified, they were really on
top, because now they had chosen to be sex objects
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and men were supposedly nothing more than their
helpless, ogling, crotch-driven slaves.
What the media have been giving us, then, are
little more than fantasies of power. They assure girls
and women, repeatedly, that women’s liberation is a
fait accompli and that we are stronger, more successful, more sexually in control, more fearless, and more
held in awe than we actually are. We can believe
that any woman can become a CEO (or president),
that women have achieved economic, professional,
and political parity with men, and we can expunge
any suggestions that there might be some of us who
actually have to live on the national median income,
which for women in 2008 was $36,000 a year,
23 percent less than that of their male counterparts.
Yet the images we see on television, in the movies, and in advertising also insist that purchasing
power and sexual power are much more gratifying
than political or economic power. Buying stuff—the
right stuff, a lot of stuff—emerged as the dominant
way to empower ourselves.2 Of course women in fictional TV shows can be in the highest positions of
authority, but in real life—maybe not such a good
idea. Instead, the wheedling, seductive message to
young women is that being decorative is the highest form of power—when, of course, if it were, Dick
Cheney would have gone to work every day in a
sequined tutu.
...
So what’s the matter with fantasies of female
power? Haven’t the media always provided escapist fantasies; isn’t that, like, their job? And aren’t
many in the media—however belatedly—simply
addressing women’s demands for more representations of female achievement and control? Well,
yes. But here’s the odd, somewhat unintended consequence: under the guise of escapism and pleasure, we are getting images of imagined power that
mask, and even erase, how much still remains to be
done for girls and women, images that make sexism
seem fine, even fun, and insist that feminism is now
utterly pointless—even bad for you. And if we look
at what is often being said about girls and women in
these fantasies—what we can and should do, what
we can and can’t be—we will see that slithering just
below the shiny mirage of power is the dark, sneaky
serpent of sexism.
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There has been a bit of a generational divide in
how these fantasies are presented. Older women—
I prefer the term “Vintage Females”—like myself
have been given all those iron-clad women in the
10:00 p.m. strip: the lawyers, cops, and district attorneys on the entire Law & Order franchise; the senior
partner Shirley Schmidt on Boston Legal; the steely
(and busty) forensic scientists on the various CSIs;
the ubiquitous female judges; and Brenda Leigh
Johnson who, with her big hair and southern drawl,
whipped her male chauvinist colleagues into shape
ASAP on The Closer.
But many of us, especially mothers, have been
less thrilled about the fantasies on offer for girls and
younger women. For “millennials”—those young
women and girls born in the late 1980s and 1990s who
are the most attractive demographic for advertisers—
the fantasies and appeals have been much more
commercial and, not surprisingly, more retrograde.
While they are the “girl power” generation, the bill
of goods they are repeatedly sold is that true power
comes from shopping, having the right logos, and
being “hot.” Power also comes from judging, dissing, and competing with other girls, especially over
guys. I have watched these fantasies—often the
opposite of the “role model” imagery presented to
me—swirl around my daughter and, well, I have not
been amused.
Things seemed okay back in the 1990s when
she could watch shows like Alex Mack, featuring
a girl with superhuman powers who morphed into
something that looked like a blob of mercury and
conducted industrial espionage, or Shelby Wu, a
girl detective. But then she graduated to MTV: by
this time, the network had stopped showing Talking Heads videos and, instead, offered up fare like
Sorority Life. Here viewers got to track the progress of college girls pledging to a sorority, and to
see which traits, behaviors, and hairdos got them in
(“nice,” “pretty,” ponytails) and which ones kept
them out (“like so bossy,” “like so phony,” any
hairstyle that resembled a mullet). Even though the
show was allegedly about college life, no books,
newspapers, novels, debates about the existence of
God, or discussion of any recent classroom lectures
cluttered the scene or troubled the dialogue. These
college girls were way too shallow for any of that.
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Enlightened Sexism | S U S A N
My sympathetic response to my teenage daughter on
the sofa, wrapped in a quilt, escaping for a bit into
this drivel-filled world? A simple bellow: “Shut that
crap off!”
...
As I stewed about the fantasies of power laid
before my daughter and those laid before me, I was,
of course, most struck at first by their generational
differences, and how they pitted us against each
other, especially around the issues of sexual display and rampant consumerism as alleged sources
of power and control. But if you think about it, they
simply buy us off in different ways, because both
approaches contribute to the false assumption that
for women, all has been won. The notion that there
might, indeed, still be an urgency to feminist politics? You have totally got to be kidding.
. . . While these fantasies have been driven in
part by girls’ and women’s desires, and have often
provided a great deal of vicarious pleasure, they
have also been driven by marketing—especially
niche, target marketing—and the use of that heady
mix of flattery and denigration to sell us everything
from skin cream to running shoes. So it’s time to
take these fantasies to the interrogation room and
shine a little light on them. . . . We need to understand, and unravel, the various forces that have
given us, say, the fearless computer geek Chloe
on 24, without whom Jack Bauer would have been
toast twenty-five times over, versus Jessica Simpson
on Newlyweds, who didn’t know how to turn on a
stove (ha! ha! get it?).
One force is embedded feminism: the way in
which women’s achievements, or their desire for
achievement, are simply part of the cultural landscape. Feminism is no longer “outside” of the media
as it was in 1970, when women staged a sit-in at the
stereotype-perpetuating Ladies’ Home Journal or
gave awards for the most sexist, offensive ads like
those of National Airlines, which featured stewardesses purring, “I’m Cheryl. Fly Me” (and required
flight attendants to wear “Fly Me” buttons). Today,
feminist gains, attitudes, and achievements are
woven into our cultural fabric.3 . . . Joss Whedon created Buffy the Vampire Slayer because he embraced
feminism and was tired of seeing all the girls in
horror films as victims, instead of possible heroes.
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But women whose kung fu skills are more awesome
than Jackie Chan’s? Or who tell a male coworker
(or boss) to his face that he’s less evolved than a
junior in high school? This is a level of commandand-control barely enjoyed by four-star generals, let
alone the nation’s actual female population.
But the media’s fantasies of power are also the
product of another force that has gained considerable
momentum since the early and mid-1990s: enlightened sexism.4 Enlightened sexism is a response,
deliberate or not, to the perceived threat of a new
gender regime. It insists that women have made
plenty of progress because of feminism—indeed,
full equality has allegedly been achieved—so now
it’s okay, even amusing, to resurrect sexist stereotypes of girls and women.5 After all, these images
(think Pussycat Dolls, The Bachelor, Are You Hot?,
the hour-and-a-half catfight in Bride Wars) can’t
possibly undermine women’s equality at this late
date, right? More to the point, enlightened sexism
sells the line that it is precisely through women’s
calculated deployment of their faces, bodies, attire,
and sexuality that they gain and enjoy true power—
power that is fun, that men will not resent, and
indeed will embrace. True power here has nothing
to do with economic independence or professional
achievement (that’s a given): it has to do with getting
men to lust after you and other women to envy you.
Enlightened sexism is especially targeted to girls and
young women and emphasizes that now that they
“have it all,” they should focus the bulk of their time
and energy on their appearance, pleasing men, being
hot, competing with other women, and shopping.
Enlightened sexism is a manufacturing process that
is produced, week in and week out, by the media. . . .
Enlightened sexism is feminist in its outward appearance (of course you can be or do anything you want)
but sexist in its intent (hold on, girls, only up to a
certain point, and not in any way that discomfits men
or pushes feminist goals one more centimeter forward). While enlightened sexism seems to support
women’s equality, it is dedicated to the undoing of
feminism.6 In fact, because this equality might lead
to “sameness”—way too scary—girls and women
need to be reminded that they are still fundamentally
female, and so must be emphatically feminine. Thus
enlightened sexism takes the gains of the women’s
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movement as a given, and then uses them as permission to resurrect retrograde images of girls and
women as sex objects, bimbos, and hootchie mamas
still defined by their appearance and their biological
destiny. So in the age of enlightened sexism there has
been an explosion in makeover, matchmaking, and
modeling shows, a renewed emphasis on women’s
breasts (and a massive surge in the promotion of
breast augmentation), an obsession with babies and
motherhood in celebrity journalism (the rise of the
creepy “bump patrol”), and a celebration of stay-athome moms and “opting out” of the workforce.
...
But girls and women are not dupes, simply saying
“whatever” to the sexism of The Real World or The
Swan (in which contestants underwent up to fourteen
often heroic cosmetic surgeries so they could compete in a beauty contest), as we could see in the outpouring of fury against the media coverage of Hillary
Clinton’s campaign, or as the ridicule my students
heap on most MTV fare suggests. We enter into TV
shows, movies, magazines, or Web sites and chat
rooms to escape, to transport ourselves into another
realm, yet we don’t want to feel like we’re totally
suckered in either. This is where most of us are, in the
complicated and contradictory terrain of negotiation.7
...
Thus, despite my own love of escaping into worlds
in which women solve crimes, are good bosses, live
in huge houses, can buy whatever they want, perform
lifesaving surgeries, and find love, I am here to argue,
forcefully, for the importance of Wariness, with a
capital W. The media have played an important role
in enabling us to have female cabinet members, in
raising awareness about and condemning domestic
violence, in helping Americans accept very different
family formations than the one on Leave It to Beaver,
even in imagining a woman president.
...
With The Closer, the surgeons on Grey’s Anatomy,
Dr. House’s female boss, and all those technically
savvy forensic scientists on the various CSIs, might
we be tempted to think such political rollbacks are
irrelevant and can’t really touch us? Or, conversely,
do the female obsessions with extreme makeovers
and being the one to get the bachelor suggest that,
at the end of the day, women really are best confined
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to the kitchen and bedroom? A 2009 poll revealed
that 60 percent of men and 50 percent of women
“are convinced that there are no longer any barriers
to women’s advancement in the workplace.”8 The
media may convey this, but data about the real jobs
most women hold, and the persistence of discrimination against them, belie this happy illusion.
...
It is only through tracing the origins of these
images of female power that we can begin to untangle
how they have offered empowerment at the cost of
eroding our self-esteem, and keeping millions in their
place. Because still, despite everything, what courses
through our culture is the belief—and fear—that once
women have power, they turn into Cruella De Vil or
Miranda Priestly in The Devil Wears Prada—evil,
tyrannical, hated, unloved. And the great irony is that
if some media fare is actually ahead of where most
women are in society, it may be thwarting the very
advances for women that it seeks to achieve.
But still we watch. There is plenty here to love,
and even more to talk back to and make fun of.
Because, while it’s only a start, laughter—especially
derisive laughter—may be the most empowering
act of all. This is part of the ongoing, never-ending
project of consciousness-raising. Then we can get
down to business. And girls, there is plenty of unfinished business at hand.
NOTES
1. For an excellent rant against and analysis of this new sexist fare see Ariel Levy, Female Chauvinist Pigs: Women
and the Rise of Raunch Culture (New York: Free Press,
2006).
2. See the superb essay by Yvonne Tasker and Diane
Negra, “Feminist Politics and Postfeminist Culture,”
in their coedited collection, Interrogating Postfeminism (Durham, N.C.: Duke University Press, 2007), 2.
3. Rosalind Gill does a superb job of summarizing postfeminism in the media in Gender and the Media (Cambridge, U.K.: Polity Press, 2007), 40.
4. I am adapting this term from Sut Jhally and Justin
Lewis’s term “enlightened racism” from their book
Enlightened Racism: The Cosby Show, Audiences, and
the Myth of the American Dream (Boulder, CO: Westview Press, 1992).
5. This entire discussion of enlightened sexism is
indebted to Angela McRobbie’s pathbreaking work on
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If Women Ran Hip Hop | A Y A
postfeminism. See, for example, “Notes on Postfeminism and Popular Culture: Bridget Jones and the New
Gender Regime,” in All About the Girl, ed. Anita Harris
(New York: Routledge, 2004); see also Gill, Gender and
the Media.
6. Angela McRobbie, The Aftermath of Feminism, 11.
(London: Sage, 2009).
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7. Stuart Hall, “Encoding/Decoding,” in Culture, Media,
Language, ed. Stuart Hall (New York: Routledge,
1980). And I want to thank my daughter, Ella, for
pointing out that these days a negotiated reading of
media texts is the preferred reading.
8. See the Rockefeller Foundation/Time magazine poll
in Nancy Gibbs, “What Women Want Now,” Time,
October 26, 2009, 31.
43
If Women Ran Hip Hop
Aya de Leon (2007)
If women ran hip hop
the beats & rhymes would be just as dope,
but there would never be a bad vibe when you walked
in the place
& the clubs would be beautiful & smell good
& the music would never be too loud
but there would be free earplugs available anyway
& venues would have skylights and phat patios
and shows would run all day not just late at night
cuz if women ran hip-hop we would have nothing to
be ashamed of
& there would be an African marketplace
with big shrines to Oya
Yoruba deity of the female warrior & entrepreneur
and women would sell & barter & prosper
If women ran hip hop
there would never be shootings
cuz there would be onsite conflict mediators
to help you work through all that negativity &
hostility
& there would also be free condoms & dental dams
in pretty baskets throughout the place
as well as counselors to help you make the decision:
do I really want to have sex with him or her?
& there would be safe, reliable, low-cost 24 hour
transportation home
& every venue would have on-site quality child care
where kids could sleep while grown folks danced
& all shows would be all ages
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cause the economy of hip-hop wouldn’t revolve
around the sale of alcohol
If women ran hip hop
same gender-loving & transgender emcees
would be proportionally represented
& get mad love from everybody
& females would dress sexy if we wanted to celebrate
our bodies
but it wouldn’t be that important because
everyone would be paying attention to our minds,
anyway
If women ran hip hop
men would be relieved because it’s so draining
to keep up that front of toughness & power & control
24-7
If women ran hip hop
the only folks dancing in cages would be dogs & cats
from the local animal shelter
excited about getting adopted by pet lovers in the crowd
If women ran hip-hop
there would be social workers available to refer gangsta rappers
to 21-day detox programs where they could get clean
& sober
from violence & misogyny
but best of all, if women ran hip hop
we would have the dopest female emcees ever
because all the young women afraid to bust
would unleash their brilliance on the world
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44
Vampires and Vixens
Alison Happel and Jennifer Esposito (2010)
The movie Twilight, first in the Twilight Saga and
directed by Catherine Hardwicke and produced by
Summit Entertainment, was released in November
of 2008. The screenplay was based on the 2005
novel of the same name, which was the first of
four novels in a series written by Stephanie Meyer.
Meyer’s book series has sold more than 42 million
copies worldwide, and it has been translated into
37 languages. The novel was adapted for the screen
by Melissa Rosenburg in 2007. The popularity of
the book series led to the overwhelmingly positive
reception of the film. Following the books, the film
was an immediate success; it grossed 70.5 million dollars on its opening weekend, and has since
grossed over 310 million in box office sales (http://
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Twilight_(2008_film)).
The film has been very popular with young
adults, and it has been marketed heavily to preteens
and teenagers. Besides the usual movie marketing strategies, the marketers of Twilight invested
heavily in online marketing that specifically targeted young adults. The advertising for Twilight
was Web savvy, and it included easily accessible
trailers of the movie, along with advertisements in
heavily trafficked young adult online spaces such as
Myspace, iTunes stores, Facebook, and YouTube.
The age-specific marketing strategies, along with
the popularity of the book series, have facilitated
the tremendous popularity of the film. Indicative
of its popularity among young adults, the film was
nominated for seven MTV movie awards and won
five of the awards in June of 2009. Given the film’s
popularity, and also its spawn of material goods
and related products, we view the film as an important part of youth’s lives and, thus, a site in need of
critique. We need to understand the ways the film
speaks to, for, and about youth. It is for these reasons we have chosen to review the film. We argue
that, although this movie works to interrupt some
stereotypical notions of gender, overall, it sexualizes violence. We see the movie as one way in
which young girls are taught to romanticize sexualized violence and, as feminists within the field
of Education, we believe it is vital for those of us
working with youth to critically engage patriarchal
messages being sold to young girls. In what follows,
we articulate how popular culture is a site of education that has social and material consequences on
youth’s lives and how this film specifically bears
dangerous lessons upon the lives of girls.
FILM SYNOPSIS
The Twilight Web site advertises the film as an
“action-packed, modern day love story.” It is the
story of a 17-year-old White girl, Bella (played
by Kristen Stewart), who moves to a small town
in Washington to live with her dad (Billy Burke),
who is the chief of police. She is immediately welcomed in her new high school by a diverse group of
students who include her in a range of high school
activities. Although she hangs out with her newly
acquired friends, she is intrigued by the Cullen siblings, four White students who are mysterious and
aloof. She meets Edward (Robert Pattinson), one of
the brothers, in science class and she immediately
feels an unexplainable attraction to him. Although
Bella is captivated by Edward, he seems repulsed
by her and avoids her. One morning before school,
Bella is almost hit by a van in the parking lot, and
Edward crosses the entire parking lot in seconds
and, with his hand as a shield, stops the van from
hitting her. Edward plays the classic hypermasculine hero in this scene and Bella is increasingly
obsessed with him. In spite of his warnings to keep
her distance, Bella starts to investigate how he saved
her life. After much research, she discovers that
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he is a vampire. Bella confronts Edward with her
newly found knowledge and he opens up to her by
disclosing details about his life as a vampire. They
start to fall in love.
Edward introduces Bella to his family. His family is unique in that, as vegetarians, they refuse to
drink the blood of humans; rather, they satisfy their
need for blood by only consuming the blood of
animals. Although Edward has committed himself
to not hunting and killing humans, Bella’s scent is
very tempting to him and he has to forcibly resist
his instincts to kill her. After Bella meets Edward’s
family, three nomadic vampires arrive on the scene,
and one of them, James (Cam Gigandet), smells
Bella’s scent and immediately wants to kill her and
drink her blood. The three vampires leave because
they are outnumbered, and the rest of the film
chronicles how Edward’s family protects Bella from
James. In the final scene, James lures Bella into an
old building, where he proceeds to bite her wrist
in an attempt to kill her. Before he can inflict any
more injuries, Edward saves her by fighting and killing James. For Bella to survive, Edward must suck
Bella’s blood to remove James’ venom. It is very
hard for him to stop once he tastes human blood, but
he does because of his love for her. Bella is taken
to the hospital once Edward saves her, and after her
release from the hospital, Edward and Bella attend
prom together. The movie ends with Bella telling
Edward that she wants to become a vampire to be
with him forever, but he refuses her request.
POPULAR CULTURE AS A SITE OF EDUCATION
Popular culture texts are important sites that teach
people about themselves and others (Kellner 1995;
Lipsitz 1998; Esposito and Love 2008). It is often
through popular culture that people gain knowledge about groups to which they do not normally
have access. This is especially true for marginalized
groups who may not be often represented in mainstream popular culture. For example, representations
of Native Americans in Hollywood films are sparse.
Exceptions include Dances with Wolves (1990), The
Last of the Mohicans (1992), and Disney’s Pocahontas (1995). Because of the lack of representation of
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Native Americans, the representations in existence
become that much more powerful as they educate
viewers who may not have direct experience with
particular marginalized populations. Popular culture,
thus, serves as a source of information about things
we may not learn about elsewhere.
From consumption of popular culture texts,
we learn what it means to live particular identities
like gender or race (Kellner 1995). These texts are
crucial sites of education and, therefore, must be
continually critiqued. Popular culture texts are constitutive (Hall 1988). These texts do not just reflect
current understandings about the world. Instead,
the texts help create the world. Consequently, as
an institution, popular culture can exert tremendous
power on creating particular versions of the world
by privileging certain ideologies. It is, thus, imperative to continually critique films that have mass
appeal especially to youth.
The popular culture text and its meaning do not
stand alone (Fiske 1989). Thus, viewers are not passive in their consumption and interpretation of texts.
The relationship between viewers and texts is an
active process (Hall 1981) of negotiating one’s view
of the world with the text’s views. We approach our
reading of the film Twilight as feminist identified
women. One author is White; one is Latina. Both
are academics. We list these identities not to essentialize or fix meanings. For example, what exactly
does it mean to live as a White feminist academic?
Our identities are not stable, nor do they denote consistently particular ways of viewing the world. We
divulge this information, however, to assert that our
reading of the film is but one. In fact, youth may
make entirely different interpretations of the text,
thus, as Buckingham (1998) suggests, there are
limitations to adult readings of youth culture. We
recognize, however, that this reading is still crucial
in an attempt to understand the power of popular
culture texts.
POSTFEMINISM AND POPULAR CULTURE
There has always been contention within the
feminist movement. When feminism is discussed
in terms of a historical perspective, the movement
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is often simplistically divided into 3 waves. Sheila
Tobias (1998) distinguishes first wave feminism as
the time period 1850–1919 which culminated in
women gaining the right to vote. The second wave is
often marked by the publication of Betty Friedan’s
Feminine Mystique in 1963, and this wave has been
deemed in popular culture as the bra-burning time of
fighting against the objectification of women (1960s
and 1970s). The third wave made claims to be a new
generation of feminists. These women had benefited
from their grandmother’s and mother’s activism and
maintained that, because the political and social climate was different in the 1980s and 1990s than what
it was during the 1960s and 1970s, their feminism
espoused different goals and expectations. McRobbie (2004) articulates the 1990s as a period where
feminists recognized the body as a site of political struggle. There was less focus on institutional
apparatuses of power as feminists made claims to
body politics. This turn away from political power
structures (including patriarchy) has created what
has been termed postfeminism. Although this term
has wide variation depending upon discipline (and
even within discipline), McRobbie (2004) defines
postfeminism as:
An active process by which feminist gains of the
1970s and 80s come to be undermined. It proposes
that through an array of machinations, elements
of contemporary popular culture are perniciously
effective in regard to this undoing of feminism,
while simultaneously appearing to be engaging in a
well-informed and even well-intended response to
feminism. (258)
Postfeminism suggests that the goals of feminism have been attained and, thus, there is no need
for further collective mobilization around gender
(Modleski 1991). Women are presumed to be free
to articulate our desires for sex, power, and money
without fear of retribution. The notion of choice
discussed in terms of postfeminism takes the stance
that women are free agents in their lives, thus, they
are able to make choices free from sexist constraints
and institutionalized oppression. The focus remains
on the individual (the personal as split from the political), instead of how the individual is located within
a heteropatriarchal culture (the personal is political).
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It is the institution of popular culture that helps disseminate the proliferation of postfeminism’s ideologies (McRobbie 2004). Some popular culture texts
deliberately examine the issue of feminism to only
illustrate how it is no longer a useful concept and
that, instead, women have moved beyond a feminist
critique of woman as object to celebrate the notion
of choice or of woman as subject (McRobbie 2004).
Kinser (2004) claims that a postfeminist discourse is
seductive to young women because they can simultaneously acknowledge feminism while expressing relief that the feminist movement is no longer
necessary. We must be cognizant of the ways that
postfeminism “co-opts the motivating discourse
of feminism but accepts a sense of empowerment
as a substitute for the work toward and evidence
of authentic empowerment” (Kinser 2004, 134).
We utilize this cautionary lens in our analysis of
Twilight as we examine and critique its post-feminist
messages.
SEXUALIZED VIOLENCE AS EMPOWERMENT?:
FEMINIST ANALYSIS OF TWILIGHT
Regardless of the quality of representation, Twilight
includes a variety of people of different races/ethnicities. We do not intend to operate from within
a binary of good versus bad representations. Issues
of representation are more complicated than such
a binary allows. Instead, we posit that representations of race and gender should be complicated as
those identities do not denote static states of being.
Instead, race and gender are shaped, constructed,
and performed in specific social contexts and historical moments. Although Twilight is problematic
in its representation of gender roles, it does try to
be transgressive in terms of destabilizing stereotypical (or nonexistent) Hollywood representations of
marginalized populations. For example, although
Bella, the main character, attends high school in a
small town (population 3,000) in Washington State,
subcharacters include a Native American (Jacob)
who attends school on a reservation, as well as
an Asian American (Eric). Native Americans and
Asian Americans are rarely included in Hollywood
productions or, if included, are represented in ways
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that perpetuate stereotypes. Twilight also tried to
destabilize the ways race is often coded as good
versus evil. The “vegetarian” vampires (Edward
and his family) are all White. The evil vampires are
comprised of two White characters and one Black
character. Although the Black man is hypersexualized (the only character shown with his shirt open
to reveal his muscular body), he ultimately reveals
a good side as he decides his two White vampire
friends are just too evil to continue hanging around.
He refuses to participate in the tracking of Bella and
the fighting with Edward’s family.
Twilight also is transgressive to a degree with its
feminist messages. For example, a female friend of
Bella’s says, “I’m thinking Eric will ask me to the
prom but he never does.” Bella tells the girl to ask
Eric herself, “Take control. You are a strong independent woman.” The female friend asks incredulously, “I am?” A few weeks later, she tells Bella,
“I’m going to the prom with Eric. I just asked him. I
took control.” Here, in true postfeminist fashion, the
notion that a woman can choose to take control and
be an agent of her own life is taken for granted. It
is something Bella reminds us to do yet it is framed
as if women should already know this and be taking
charge of their own lives in this way. Yet, in one of
the next scenes, viewers witness the girls shopping
for prom dresses as the boys view them through the
store window. The girls are being objectified, but
it is only Bella who recognizes the problem with it
as she says, “That’s disgusting.” Her friends, on the
other hand, do not seem to mind being objectified.
The lack of discussion of male privilege helps position Bella as a feminist who is taking things all too
seriously. This is an excellent example of popular
culture contributing to the postfeminist message that
equality has already been achieved, so women really
do not need to mobilize anymore least of all complain about being looked at by men.
However, the film shows us the sometimes brutal
cost of unequal gendered relations in the next scene.
Bella walks back from a bookstore by herself that
night while her friends still shop for prom dresses.
It appears there is a price to pay for her being smart
and seeking knowledge. She happens upon four
drunk boys who circle around her. Viewers brace
themselves for what appears will be a rape. Bella is
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stunned and voiceless at first. Then she yells, “Don’t
touch me!” Before she starts to fight off the boys,
Edward comes to her rescue. He tells her to get into
the car and then shows his fangs to the boys, who
instantly cower and back away. Bella’s friends are
genuinely concerned about her and believe something might have happened to her. When she and
Edward pull up in his car, he takes responsibility
for Bella and tells her friends it was his fault Bella
is late. Her friends giggle and tell him, “It happens.”
Although it is implied by her friends’ fears that
something terrible might have happened to Bella,
her friends seem jovial that Bella was spending time
with Edward instead of them. Here, it seems as if it
is okay for girls to give up their female friends to
spend time with a boy.
Although there are, arguably, complicated
messages concerning female power and agency
within the movie, we argue that its basic premise
upholds patriarchal ideology while employing certain assumptions of postfeminism. Twilight’s main
theme, Bella’s love for a boy who wants to kill her,
sexualizes violence. Throughout the movie, Edward
warns Bella about the dangers of being around both
him and his family, yet she continues to put her
life in jeopardy because of her love for him. The
movie is consistently sensual, and the eroticism
seems to be heightened during scenes involving violence. Bella’s body language during violent scenes
throughout the movie is noticeably sexual; she often
appears breathing heavily with her mouth open and
her cheeks flushed. Also, the movie suggests that
there is a correlation between her love for Edward,
and how dangerous he is to her. This sexualization of
violence is related to postfeminism in that postfeminism claims that women have the power and agency
to choose any kind of relationship for themselves,
even relationships that have the potential for danger
and/or violence. Postfeminism’s insistence on individualism and assumed equality is the foundation
for the audience to view Bella’s relationship with
Edward as an innocuous choice that does not need
to be contextualized in histories of violence against
women. This ahistorical and decontextualized presentation of sexualized violence through the employment of postfeminism actually serves to uphold
and perpetuate patriarchal (and highly dangerous)
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notions about love, sexuality, and gender roles.
Because postfeminism assumes that women have
already fought for equality and won, Bella’s choice
to be with Edward is seen as a personal choice that
was made autonomously, and therefore should be
respected and not challenged.
IMPLICATIONS FOR YOUTH
Twilight was released on November 21, 2008, only
months before two popular hip hop/R&B artists,
Chris Brown and Rihanna, were part of a domestic
dispute that led to Brown threatening Rihanna with
death and beating her almost unconscious. Brown’s
attack caused multiple contusions and bruises on
Rihanna’s body. Rumors circulated in the media
that Rihanna ultimately forgave Brown, went back
to the relationship, and even asked a judge to not
issue a “No contact” order against Brown. Whether
this is true or not does not matter. What matters is
what young girls believed about the outcome of
the incident. The media examined this case from a
variety of different angles, including the fact that,
given that Rihanna was a role model to so many
young girls, some were concerned about what the
incident might have taught them (and young boys)
about domestic violence. Sadly, we think that the
Chris Brown and Rihanna incident teaches girls the
old adage that “boys will be boys.” Like Belle in
Disney’s Beauty and the Beast, the incident encourages girls to help tame their beast, to make him into
a better man. We believe Twilight encourages a
similar message.
Within the United States, there are alarming
rates of physical and sexual violence against both
women and girls. According to the Rape, Abuse,
and Incest National Network, the largest antisexual
assault organization in the United States, one in six
women will be a victim of sexual assault, and someone is sexually assaulted every two minutes within
the United States (http://www.rainn.org/statistics).
Although the producers of movies such as Twilight
assumedly seek to provide harmless entertainment
while also providing a seemingly innocuous message of girl power, we argue that the movie, instead,
perpetuates notions of feminized helplessness
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and sexualized violence. Bella is tough and smart
when she is not in danger, but when her life is in
jeopardy, Edward intervenes on multiple occasions
for the classic masculine rescue. Also, throughout
the movie, Bella is obsessed with a boy who wants
to literally kill her, and the audience is encouraged
to romanticize this. Instead of raising concern about
domestic and sexual violence through a feminist
storyline, the movie instead sexualizes violence by
making Edward’s killer instincts sexy and Bella’s
irrational intrigue understandable and even condoned by friends and family.
Because we understand education as broadly
conceived, we believe that it is important to engage
with messages that youth are receiving both inside
and outside of the actual school walls. We believe
that it is important for educators and parents to
understand what is happening in students’ lives, and
popular culture is an important educative site for
many students of all ages. The walls of the school
building are porous, and there is a dialectical relationship between what is learned inside of the classroom, and what lessons are learned outside of the
classroom. To reach and connect with students, educators must be critically engaged with various messages and texts that students are consuming (Kellner
and Share 2006), and we believe it is crucial for
adults to critically engage with potentially problematic texts that promote harmful messages and
ideologies. Critical engagement with and through
popular culture is an important way for educators to
better understand and relate to their students.
REFERENCES
Buckingham, David. 1998. “Introduction: Fantasies of
Empowerment? Radical Pedagogy and Popular Culture.” Pp. 1–17 in Teaching Popular Culture. Edited
by David Buckingham. London: UCL Press.
Esposito, Jennifer, and Bettina Love. 2008. “More than a
Video Hoe: Hip Hop as a Site of Sex Education about
Girls’ Sexual Desires.” Pp. 43-82 in The Corporate
Assault on Youth: Commercialism, Exploitation, and
the End of Innocence. Edited by Deron Boyles. New
York: Peter Lang.
Hall, Stuart. 1981. “Notes on Deconstructing the Popular.” Pp. 227–240 in People’s History and Socialist
Theory. Edited by Raphael Samuel. London:
Routledge.
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––––––. 1988. “New Ethnicities.” Pp. 27–31 in Black
Film/British Cinema, ICA Documents 7. Edited by
Kobena Mercer. London: Institute of Contemporary
Arts.
Fiske, John. 1989. Reading the Popular. Boston: Unwin
Hyman.
Kellner, Douglas. 1995. Media Culture: Cultural Studies, Identity and Politics Between the Modern and the
Postmodern. New York: Routledge.
Kellner, Douglas and Jeff Share. 2006. “Critical Media
Literacy is Not an Option.” Learning Inquiry
1: 59–69.
Kinser, Amber E. 2004. “Negotiating Spaces for/through
Third Wave Feminism.” NWSA Journal 16: 124–154.
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Lipsitz, George. 1998. Dangerous Crossroads: Popular
Music, Postmodernism and the Poetics of Place.
New York: Verso.
McRobbie, Angela. 2004. “Post-Feminism and Popular
Culture.” Feminist Media Studies 4: 255–264.
Modleski, Tania. 1991. Feminism Without Women:
Culture and Criticism in a “Postfeminist” Age.
New York: Routledge.
Tobias, Sheila. 1998. Faces of Feminism: An Activist’s
Reflections on the Women’s Movement. Boulder, CO:
Westview Press.
45
Don’t Act Crazy, Mindy
Heather Havrilesky (2013)
At first glance, this looks like a great moment for
women on television. Many smart and confident
female characters have paraded onto the small
screen over the past few years. But I’m bothered by
one persistent caveat: that the more astute and capable many of these women are, the more likely it is
that they’re also completely nuts.
I don’t mean complicated, difficult, thorny or
complex. I mean that these women are portrayed as
volcanoes that could blow at any minute. Worse, the
very abilities and skills that make them singular and
interesting come coupled with some hideous psychic deficiency.
On “Nurse Jackie,” for example, the main character is an excellent R.N. in part because she’s
self-medicated into a state of extreme calm. On
“The Killing,” Detective Linden, the world-weary,
cold-souled cop, is a tenacious investigator in part
because she’s obsessive and damaged and a pretty
terrible mother. And then there’s “Homeland,”
on which Carrie Mathison, the nearly clairvoyant
C.I.A. agent, is bipolar, unhinged and has proved,
in her pursuit of an undercover terrorist, to be recklessly promiscuous.
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These aren’t just complicating characteristics
like, say, Don Draper’s narcissism. The suggestion
in all of these shows is that a female character’s
flaws are inextricably linked to her strengths. Take
away this pill problem or that personality disorder,
and the exceptional qualities vanish as well. And
this is not always viewed as a tragedy—when Carrie
undergoes electroconvulsive therapy, we breathe a
sigh of relief and draw closer. Look how restful it
is for her, enjoying a nice sandwich and sleeping
peacefully in her childhood bed.
You’d think the outlook would be sunnier on
some of the lighter TV dramas and comedies, which
have also lately offered several strong and inspiring
(if neurotic) female protagonists, from Annie Edison
of “Community” to Leslie Knope of “Parks and
Recreation.” Yet here, too, an alarming number of
accomplished women are also portrayed as spending most of their waking hours swooning like lovesick tweens —whether it’s Emily on “Emily Owens,
M.D.” (a knowledgeable doctor who loses focus
whenever her super-dreamy crush enters the room),
the title character of “Whitney” (a garrulous photographer who is nonetheless fixated on her looks and
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her ability to keep attractive romantic rivals away
from her man), or Mindy of “The Mindy Project”
(a highly paid ob-gyn who’s obsessed with being
too old and not pretty enough to land a husband).
Even a classical comedic heroine like Liz Lemon
on “30 Rock” is frequently reduced to flailing and
squirming like an overcaffeinated adolescent. The
moral of many of these shows doesn’t seem so far off
from that of those fatalistic female-centric magazine
features that seem to run every few months; something along the lines of, “You can’t have it all, ladies,
and you’ll run yourself ragged if you even try.”
We could take heart that at least women are
depicted as being just as reckless and promiscuous
and demanding and intense as their male counterparts, if their bad behavior weren’t so often accompanied by a horror soundtrack and dizzying camera
angles that encourage us to view them as unhinged.
The crazed antics of male characters like Don
Draper, Walter White or Dr. Gregory House are
reliably treated as bold, fearless and even ultimately
heroic (a daring remark saves the big account; a
lunatic gesture scares off a murderous thug; an abrasive approach miraculously yields the answer that
saves a young girl’s life). Female characters rarely
enjoy such romantic spin.
Their flaws are fatal, or at least obviously selfdestructive, and they seem designed to invite censure. Time and again, we, the audience, are cast in
the role of morally superior observers to these nut
jobs. At times we might relate to a flash of anger,
a fit of tears, a sudden urge to seduce a stranger in
a bar, but we’re constantly being warned that these
behaviors aren’t normal. They render these women
out of step with the sane world.
When Nurse Jackie chokes down pills and
cavorts with the pharmacist while her perfectly good
husband waits around at home with the kids, we can
see clearly where too much sass and independence
might lead. When Detective Linden dumps her son
in a hotel room for the umpteenth time and then he
goes missing, or Dr. Yang’s emotional frigidity on
“Grey’s Anatomy” leaves her stranded at the altar,
or Nancy Botwin of “Weeds” sleeps with (and eventually marries) a Mexican drug boss, thereby endangering her kids, we’re cued to shake our heads at
the woeful choices of these otherwise-impressive
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women. When Carrie on “Homeland” chugs a
tumbler of white wine, then fetches one of her black
sequined tops out of the closet, we’re meant to
lament her knee-jerk lasciviousness. Her mania is
something she needs to be cured of, or freed from
—unlike, say, Monk, whose psychological tics are
portrayed as the adorable kernel of his genius.
So why should instability in men and women be
treated so differently? “If you don’t pull it together,
no one will ever love you,” a talking Barbie doll
tells Mindy during a fantasy on “The Mindy Project,” reminding us exactly what’s on the line here.
Don’t act crazy, Mindy. Men don’t like crazy.
Some would argue that we’ve come a long
way since Desi treated Lucy like a petulant child
or June Cleaver smiled beatifically at her plucky
spawn. “Mary Tyler Moore,” “Murphy Brown” and
“Roseanne” all demonstrated that a smart woman
can have a life outside of cooking, cleaning and
begging to be put in her husband’s show. They
offered us female characters who failed to blend
seamlessly with their surroundings—because they
were willing to voice their doubts, confess their
crushes, seek out sex and openly confront others.
But right around the time “Ally McBeal” hit the
air, the attempts to unveil the truth of the female experience started to sail far past the intended mark. The
independent woman took on a hysterical edge; she
was not only opinionated but also wildly insecure,
sexually ravenous or panic-stricken over her waning
fertility. Surprising as it was that McBeal was once
heralded as a post-feminist hero on the cover of Time
in 1998, what’s more surprising is that since then, we
haven’t come all that much further, baby.
Sure, there are lots of exceptions, like
Tami Taylor, the self-possessed working mom of
“Friday Night Lights,” or Hannah Horvath, the
outspoken memoirist of “Girls,” or the intelligent
women of “Mad Men,” whose struggles and flaws
at least parallel those of the men swarming around
them. But alongside every coolheaded Peggy Olson,
we get hotheaded train-wreck characters like Ivy
Lynn of “Smash”—women who, like the ballerinas
with lead weights around their ankles in Kurt
Vonnegut Jr.’s short story “Harrison Bergeron,”
can show no strength without an accompanying
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impediment to weigh them down, whether it’s
self-destructive urges, tittering self-consciousness
or compulsive pill-popping. Where Roseanne and
Mary and Murphy matter-of-factly admitted and
often even flaunted their flaws, these characters
are too ashamed and apologetic (and repeatedly
demeaned) to be taken seriously.
“Women have often felt insane when cleaving
to the truth of our experience,” Adrienne Rich once
wrote. There’s truth in these images of women, from
the neurotic ob-gyn fixated on finding Mr. Right to
the workaholic C.I.A. agent who feels adrift when
she isn’t obsessing about issues of national security 18 hours a day. But why must these characters
also be certifiable? Give Mindy a tiny slice of Louis
C.K.’s poker-faced smugness. Give Carrie Mathison
one-tenth of Jack Bauer’s overconfidence and irreproachability. Where’s the taboo in that?
Women, with their tendency to “ask uncomfortable questions and make uncomfortable connections,” as Rich puts it, are pathologized for the very
traits that make them so formidable. Or as Emily
Dickinson wrote:
Much Madness is divinest Sense—
To a discerning Eye—
Much Sense—the starkest Madness—
’Tis the Majority
In this, as All, prevail—
Assent—and you are sane—
Demur—you’re straightway dangerous—
And handled with a Chain—
“All smart women are crazy,” I once told an
ex-boyfriend in a heated moment, in an attempt to
depict his future options as split down the middle
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between easygoing dimwits and sharp women who
were basically just me with different hairstyles. By
“crazy,” I only meant “opinionated” and “moody”
and “not always as pliant as one might hope.” I was
translating my personality into language he might
understand—he who used “psycho-chick” as a
stand-in for “noncompliant female” and he whose
idea of helpful counsel was “You’re too smart for
your own good,” “my own good” presumably being
some semivegetative state of acceptance which
precluded uncomfortable discussions about our
relationship.
Over the years, “crazy” became my own reductive shorthand for every complicated, strong-willed
woman I met. “Crazy” summed up the good and the
bad in me and in all of my friends. Whereas I might
have started to recognize that we were no more
crazy than anyone else in the world, instead I simply
drew a larger and larger circle of crazy around us,
lumping together anyone unafraid of confrontation,
anyone who openly admitted her weaknesses, anyone who pursued agendas that might be out of step
with the dominant cultural noise of the moment.
“Crazy” became code for “interesting” and “courageous” and “worth knowing.” I was trying to have a
sense of humor about myself and those around me,
trying to make room for stubbornness and vulnerability and uncomfortable questions.
But I realize now, after watching these crazy
characters parade across my TV screen, that there’s
self-hatred in this act of self-subterfuge. “Our future
depends on the sanity of each of us,” Rich writes,
“and we have a profound stake, beyond the personal, in the project of describing our reality as candidly and fully as we can to each other.”
Maybe this era of “crazy” women on TV is
an unfortunate way-station on the road from
placid compliance to something more complex—
something more like real life. Many so-called crazy
women are just smart, that’s all. They’re not too
smart for their own good, or for ours.
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Beyoncé: Feminist Icon?
Sophie Weiner (2013)
Beyoncé has become an icon, and in no small part
this is due to her willingness to use her gender as a
creative tool. The argument over whether the singer
is a bona fide feminist or just a pop star cashing
in on “girl power” has raged for years, but whatever side of the debate you land on, her message of
empowerment, commitment to her craft, and control
over her image and performance are undeniable. In
celebration of her latest feat—that flawless halftime performance in which she was backed by an
all-female band—here’s a collection of Beyoncé’s
most feminist moments to date.
the economic inequality that affects women at every
socio-economic level (and even more so for African
American women):
You know, equality is a myth, and for some reason,
everyone accepts the fact that women don’t make
as much money as men do. I don’t understand that.
Why do we have to take a backseat?” she says in
her film, which begins with her 2011 decision to
sever her business relationship with her father. “I
truly believe that women should be financially independent from their men. And let’s face it, money
gives men the power to run the show. It gives men
the power to define value. They define what’s sexy.
And men define what’s feminine. It’s ridiculous.
BEYONCÉ’S SUPER BOWL HALFTIME SHOW
The most recent and relevant example of Beyoncé’s
feminism was her performance at the all-American
spectacle of Sunday’s Super Bowl. With its massive
budget and Beyoncé’s overpowering stage presence, the show delivered. Along with her solo songs,
the reunion of her original group, Destiny’s Child,
highlighted the progress she’s made as an artist. The
foregrounding of female musicians was incredible
as a symbol of resistance against an industry where
male musicians are still the norm. At the paean to
male achievement that is the Super Bowl, it was
impossible to see the performance and not feel
Beyoncé had somehow won the whole thing.
“INDEPENDENT WOMAN PART 1”
Possibly the most obvious musical example of
Beyoncé’s support of female empowerment is the
song her former girl group Destiny’s Child recorded
for the 2000 film version of Charlie’s Angels, “Independent Woman Part 1.” In a matter-of-fact manner,
the song states the benefits of being a woman who
isn’t beholden to a male breadwinner—a theme that
repeats itself throughout Beyoncé’s work. In a remake
of a TV show that originally glorified female submissiveness, this was a great fuck-you to the misogynist
subject matter, and a pop song that has endured.
BEYONCÉ IN GQ
TELEPHONE
Beyoncé’s recent GQ feature and cover are a great
example of the dichotomy of her public existence.
While the sexy cover agitated many by-the-book
feminists, the article itself complicated her image
and demonstrated her in-depth understanding of gender inequality, particularly within the music industry. The most on-point quote in the article addresses
A frequently noted and frustrating tendency of our
patriarchal society is its tendency to encourage
women, or any minority in a competitive field, to
undermine each other in order to be the example
of their demographic in the American mainstream.
Though “Telephone” is neither Beyoncé’s nor Lady
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297
Gaga’s best song, it’s a great example of two female
artists refusing to accept that women in the cutthroat
world of pop stardom cannot work together. The
allusions to both Thelma & Louise and a genderinverted Pulp Fiction reinforce the video’s premise
that girl power can reign supreme.
Feminist actions speak louder than labels, so
to us, this quote says it all: Beyoncé arrived at her
definition of feminism out of genuine concern for
the situation of herself and the women around her.
If living by her own morals is what has defined
Beyoncé’s feminism, we are all for it.
RUN THE WORLD (GIRLS)
SURVIVOR
Another on the list of feminist-Beyoncé controversies is her song that proclaims that girls run the
world. Though she herself acknowledges in her GQ
article and other places that this isn’t our reality, art
has its own impact, and releasing a song that carries
this message, with the intention of having it played
on every dance floor around the world, is a ballsy
political step.
A rock-solid breakup jam and feminist anthem,
“Survivor,” the title track off Destiny’s Child’s 2001
album, gave hope to a generation that was growing
up in an era with few alternatives to the simplistic
and stereotypical gender roles presented by Britney
Spears and N*Sync. The lyrics show a belief in
women’s ability to solve their own problems, assuring us that whatever rough situation we’re in, we’ll
get through it—something we could all stand to be
reminded of from time to time.
BEYONCÉ ACCEPTS THE FEMINIST LABEL
“I think I am a feminist, in a way,” Beyoncé told
The Daily Mail in 2010. “It’s not something I consciously decided I was going to be; perhaps it’s
because I grew up in a singing group with other
women, and that was so helpful to me,” she told
the magazine. “It kept me out of so much trouble
and out of bad relationships. My friendships with
my girls are just so much a part of me that there are
things I am never going to do that would upset that
bond. I never want to betray that friendship, because
I love being a woman and I love being a friend to
other women.”
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JAY-Z TOOK BEYONCÉ’S NAME, TOO
Finally, and most confoundingly, Beyoncé has just
announced that her next world tour will be called
the “Mrs. Carter Show,” taking its name from her
husband, Jay-Z. Though seen as a step backward by
many feminist fans, others interpreted this decision
as one of marketing savvy, pooling the massive fan
base that both artists possess, or just as a winking
dedication to the husband she very publicly loves—
and who has taken her name as she has taken his.
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Cyberactivism and the Role of Women in the
Arab Uprisings
Courtney C. Radsch (2012)
“I, a girl, am going down to Tahrir Square, and I
will stand alone. And I’ll hold up a banner. Perhaps
people will show some honor. I even wrote my number so maybe people will come down with me. No
one came except . . . three guys and three armored
cars of riot police . . . I’m making this video to give
you one simply message: We want to go down to
Tahrir Square on January 25. If we still have honor
and want to live with dignity on this land, we have to
go down on January 25. We’ll go down and demand
our rights, our fundamental human rights . . . If you
think yourself a man, come with me on January
25th. Whoever says a women shouldn’t go to protests because they will get beaten, let him have some
honor and manhood and come with me on January
25th . . . Sitting at home and just following us on
news or Facebook leads to our humiliation, leads to
my own humiliation. If you have honor and dignity
as a man, come . . . If you stay home, you deserve
what will happen to you . . . and you’ll be guilty,
before your nation and your people . . . Go down
to the street, send SMSs, post it post it on the ‘net.
Make people aware . . . It will make a difference, a
big difference . . . never say there’s no hope . . . so
long you come down with us, there will be hope . . .
don’t think you can be safe any more! None of us
are! Come down with us and demand your rights my
rights, your family’s rights.”
Thus was the call to action that 26-year-old
Asmaa Mahfouz made in a video she posted to
YouTube on January 18, 2011, which went viral
and turned her into a symbol of the Egyptian revolution. A day later, 32-year-old Tawakkol Karman
organized a protest in solidarity with the Tunisian
people in downtown Sana’a that drew thousands to
the streets in an unprecedented public demonstration by women. Young women have been at the
forefront of the revolutionary uprisings that have
toppled regimes in Egypt, Tunisia, and Yemen,
along with the more protracted struggles in Bahrain, Saudi Arabia, and Syria. They were among
the Twitterati and citizen journalists who became
leading news sources—the protesters who took to
the streets and the cybersphere to demand that their
entrenched leaders step down, and the citizens who
paid the ultimate price, being beaten to death and
murdered in those regimes’ desperate attempts to
cling to power.
This research . . . explores how young women
used social media and cyberactivism to help shape
the “Arab Spring” and its aftermath. The engagement of women with social media has coincided
with a shift in the political landscape of the Middle
East, and it is unlikely that they will ever retreat from
the new arenas they have carved out for themselves.
Throughout the region, women have taken to the
streets in unprecedented numbers, translating digital
advocacy and organization into physical mobilization and occupation of public spaces in a dialectic of
online and offline activism that is particular to this
era. They have used citizen journalism and social
networking to counter the state-dominated media
in their countries and influence mainstream media
around the world. In the process, they are reconfiguring the public sphere in their countries, as well as
the expectations of the public about the role women
can and should play in the political lives of their
countries.
Several of the women who participated in and led
the Arab uprisings were cyberactivists prior to the
convulsions of 2011, but many more were inspired
to become activists by the events happening around
them. Although women young and old took part, it
was the younger generation that led the way online.
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They helped organize virtual protests as well as
street demonstrations and played bridging roles
with the mainstream media, helping to ensure that
the 24-hour news cycle always had a source at the
ready. Twitter became a real-time newsfeed, connecting journalists directly with activists and becoming a key tool in the battle to frame the protests and
set the news agenda, particularly in the international
media like Al Jazeera and elite Western outlets.
Media outlets repurposed citizen-generated videos
on YouTube and photos on Flikr, while Facebook
provided a platform for aggregating, organizing,
disseminating, and building solidarity.
Women have played a central role in the creation
of a virtual public sphere online via social media
and blogs, but have also demanded greater access,
representation, and participation in the physical
public sphere, epitomized by the physical squares
that represent the imaginary center of political life
in their countries: Tahrir Square in Egypt and Benghazi, Libya; Taghir Square in Yemen; and the Pearl
Roundabout in Bahrain. They tore down physical
and social barriers between men and women, challenging cultural and religious norms and taboos and
putting women’s empowerment at the center of the
struggle for political change. As one blogger put
it, “The most encouraging feature of the current
upheaval is the massive participation of women;
not only the young educated women who uses (sic)
the Internet but also the grassroots uneducated older
women from rural cities.”*
Among the iconic figures of these Arab revolutionary uprisings are several women who are inextricably linked with the new media platforms that
have fundamentally shifted the balance of power.
Not only have cyberactivism and social media platforms shifted the power dynamics of authoritarian Arab governments and their citizenry, but they
have also reconfigured power relations between the
youth who make up the majority of the population
and the older generation of political elites who were
* Dalia Ziada, “Egypt’s Revolution—How Does It All Start?”
Dalia Ziada (blog), February 3, 2011, http://daliaziada.blogspot.
com/2011/02/jan25-egypts-revolution-how-does-it-all.html.
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overwhelmingly male and often implicated in the
perpetuation of the status quo.
While women and men struggle valiantly to bring
about political change, the cyberactivists stand out
for their use of new media technologies and access to
platforms that transcended national boundaries and
created bridges with transnational media and activists groups. The importance of these cyberactivist
platforms could be seen in the way they became part
of the lexicon of dissent. Esraa Abdel Fattah was
known as “Facebook girl” for her role in launching
one of the most important opposition youth groups
in Egypt, the April 6 Movement. Egypt’s Mona Eltahawy, Libya’s Danya Bashir, Bahrain’s Zeinab alKhawaja and Maryam al-Khawaja, and many others
became known as the “Twitterrati” as influential
media and pundits dubbed their Twitter accounts as
“must-follows.”. . .
CITIZEN JOURNALISM AND SYMBIOSIS WITH
MAINSTREAM MEDIA
Many of these women cyberactivists chose citizen journalism as the primary mode of contestation in their battles with entrenched regimes. One
young woman named Fatima, but better known by
her blog name Arabicca, labeled 2011 the “Year
of Citizen Journalism.”1 Citizen journalists radically shifted the media ecosystem and informational status quo by witnessing, putting on record,
and imbuing political meaning to symbolic struggles to define quotidian resistance against social
injustice, harassment, and censorship as part of a
broader movement for political reform. As sociologist Pierre Bourdieu aptly observed, “ The simple report, the very fact of reporting, of putting
on record as a reporter, always implies a social
construction of reality that can mobilize (or demobilize) individuals or groups.”2 Information and
events do not inherently have political meaning or
importance, but rather must be interpreted, framed,
and contextualized before becoming imbued with
significance and import, a process in which journalists play a central role. As one of Egypt’s leading
cyberactivists and citizen journalists astutely notes
on the front page of his blog: “In a dictatorship,
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independent journalism by default becomes a form
of activism, and the spread of information is essentially an act of agitation.”3
Cyberactivists sought to influence domestic
media and counter the pro-regime framing of the
uprisings. Indeed, one of the primary goals and successes of citizen journalism in the lead-up to the
Arab uprisings was creating awareness among people about their rights and the excesses of the Arab
regimes. In Egypt, the state-run media refused to
even cover the uprising in the early days or would
blatantly misreport information, while in Bahrain the
lack of independent media meant that the regime’s
framing of the conflict as sectarian in nature had no
counterpoint except for citizen media. Because of
lingering distrust of the mainstream media in Libya,
cultivated over the 42 years of Ghaddafi’s rule in
which he controlled and manipulated the media,
people rely on personal connections and relationships in assessing the trustworthiness of news and
information. “Facebook is more trustworthy than
the media,” one young Libyan woman told me. Bahraini writer Lamees Dhaif embodies this shifting
typology of journalism, blurring the lines between
professional and citizen journalist as she continues to speak out in the media against the abuses of
her government, even as she blogs and tweets to
an audience far bigger than the largest circulation
newspaper in her home country. She dismissed the
Bahraini authorities’ attempts to silence her, noting
that she has almost 60,000 followers on Twitter and
43,000 subscribers to her blog, whereas the largest
circulation newspaper in Bahrain prints only 12,000
copies daily. “So if they don’t want me to write in
newspapers, who cares,” said Dhaif.
In Tunisia, bloggers like 27-year-old Lina Ben
Mhenni played a critical role in breaking the mainstream media blackout on the protests that erupted
around the country after the self-immolation of
a fruit vendor in the southern city of Sidi Bouzid.
She was one of the first people to write about the
incident and turned her blog, Twitter, and Facebook
page into a virtual newsroom.
On December 17, 2010, tweets about Tunisia
started appearing following the death of 26-yearold Mohamed Bouazizi, who had set himself on fire
in protest against the humiliation and harassment he
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suffered at the hands of police as he tended to his
stand; his story was familiar to many young men
and women who heard about it via social media networks. Ben Mhenni, who blogs in Arabic, English,
French, and German at A Tunisian Girl, called her
friends for updates she then posted on social media
and ended up deciding to go there herself to report.
“I decided to share the grief of the inhabitants of
Sidi Bouzid,” she wrote on her blog.4 Over the next
several weeks she travelled the country, posting pictures and reports about the outbreak of street demonstrations and the violent responses by the regime.
She relied on Twitter, Facebook, and her blog
because, as she noted, only citizen media was covering the protests since the mainstream media only
concerned itself with such uncontroversial news as
the activities of the president and sports.5
Several Facebook pages were created in the
wake of Bouazizi’s suicide, such as the Arabic page
“Mr. President, Tunisians are Setting Themselves
on Fire,” which garnered 2,500 fans within a day of
its creation and 10,000 more a week later, helping to
spread information about protests and providing an
outlet for young Tunisians to express their anger.6
There were few foreign media in Tunisia at that
time: Al Jazeera had one foreign correspondent on
the ground, as did France24, while the U.S. media
were completely absent. There were no American
channels, and even the Arab and French channels
heavily depended on social media content and YouTube video. There were reports that Al Jazeera
relied on citizen-generated videos for more than
60 percent of its content during the weeks leading
up to President Zine al-Abedine Ben Ali’s ouster
on January 14, 2011, although one senior media
executive told me that in fact the station was 100
percent dependent on such content in the first couple of weeks of the uprising. Citizen journalists and
bloggers like Ben Mhenni, therefore, played a critical role in reporting on the uprising and providing
content to mainstream media.
As the uprising gathered strength, the regime
engaged in a counter-information campaign and
sought to discredit citizen media. Ben Mhenni,
whose father was also a political activist, started
blogging in 2007 and had already earned a reputation covering human rights issues and freedom of
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expression, so her credibility was established. She
also knew how to bypass the censorship that rendered key social media sites, including YouTube
and Flikr, inaccessible to those who were not as
adroit at using circumvention tools. “The Tunisian
government did not find another solution but to censor the websites disseminating the story and imposing a blockade on the city of Sidi Bouzid, where
people are expressing their anger by protesting in
the streets,” she wrote on the activist blog Global
Voices.7 Tunisia was among the most sophisticated Internet censors in the world, leading Reporters without Borders to put the country on its list of
“Internet Enemies” and Freedom House8 to characterize its multilayered Internet censorship apparatus
as “one of the world’s most repressive.”9
By 2011, 3.6 million Tunisians had Internet
access and more than 1.8 million of them had a
Facebook account. As one Tunisan bloguese10 put
it: “Everything happened on Facebook.”11 Twitter
was also an important tool; the Tunisian share-ofvoice among MENA Twitter users rose significantly
as protests erupted throughout the country, rising
from about five percent on December 17, 2010, to
more than 70 percent the day before Ben Ali fled
the country.12 That is, everything that happened in
the streets was recorded and posted online, which
flooded social media networks with news of the
uprising. “Women were present in every stage and
each action of the uprising,” Ben Mhenni told me.
“They were present on the street [and] behind their
screens.”
...
Linking Cyberactivism with the Street
Cyberactivists recognize that their activism does not
end at the computer screen, but must go hand-inhand with other forms of political engagement and
be translated into physical manifestations of political protest. “Cyberactivism is not just work behind
the screen, it is also smelling the tear gas and facing the security forces live ammunition,” noted Ben
Mhenni in an interview. Many explicitly credited
social media with changing the dynamics in authoritarian countries throughout the region, but acknowledged the offline work that must also go into human
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rights and political reform work. Throughout the
region people took to the streets to demand change
in unprecedented numbers, and in each case women
figured prominently.
According to reports about previous protests in
Egypt, women only accounted for about 10 percent
of the protesters, whereas they accounted for about
40 to 50 percent in Tahrir Square in the days leading
up to the fall of Mubarak.13 Since 2004, Egyptian
women have actively staked a claim in cyberspace,
even as they took to the streets as part of the Kefaya
movement in 2004-2006, the April 6 Youth Movement in 2008, and others—but never in the numbers that participated in the revolution. The 18-day
uprising included women on a scale not seen before,
and in many ways the cyberactivist movement
helped lay the groundwork and change the mindset
of a new generation of Egyptian youth. Veiled and
unveiled women participated in the protests, provided support to the hungry and the wounded, led
chants against the regime and more recently against
the ruling military Supreme Council of the Armed
Forces (SCAF), opened their homes to protesters and
cyberactivists, and slept in Tahrir Square together
with their male compatriots. These women were not
only secularists or liberals; the Muslim Sisters, the
female wing of the Ikhwan Muslimeen (The Muslim
Brotherhood), were also active. Muslim Sisters
joined in the protests, discussing their ideas and
leading collective actions, using their social media
accounts to communicate their experiences and fight
for their political ideals. As one activist noted: “The
women of the Muslim Brotherhood, who are traditionally a silent group walking behind the chanting
men, were joining with other people, discussing and
exchanging with them—they were even up there,
right at the front, leading cheers and chants. That is
a radical shift.”14
...
Inspiration and Mobilization
Women played a pivotal role in inspiring their fellow citizens to take part in the uprisings, whether
through admiration or confrontation. In her YouTube message (quoted at the beginning of this
paper), for example, Egypt’s Asmaa Mahfouz
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played on the male sense of honor in calling for men
to join her in the street, deriding men who stayed at
home while “the more vulnerable sex” took to the
streets and faced the riot police.
As they watched the fall of regimes in Tunisia
and Egypt, Libyan youth started talking on Facebook about the need for revolution in their country.
They wrote on each other’s walls and started groups
to inspire each other and build support for collective action. On February 17, 2011, a video of the
protest in Benghazi spread like wildfire among the
connected youth of Libya, who made sure it also got
to the international media. “I must say that without
Facebook and social media, there would not have
been a revolution,” one 23-year-old blogger from
Misrata told me. “It was a revolution started on
Facebook.” Others inspired their fellow citizens
with their fearlessness in the face of repression and
willingness to traverse red lines.
...
SEXUAL VIOLENCE AS A FORM OF
INTIMIDATION
Women face specific threats and violence that their
male counterparts for the most part do not, and they
have paid a steep price as regime defenders and
authorities have used sexual violence in an attempt
to silence and intimidate them. Gender-specific
threats and sexual violence—including brutal beatings during protests, so-called “virginity tests,”15
degrading and brutal treatment including torture
during detainment, and character assassination—
specifically exploit cultural taboos in which female
victims are seen as having brought dishonor upon
themselves. Sexual assault, including rape, has
become a defining feature of the uprisings in Egypt
and Libya, but has also been used by regimes
throughout the region as a tactic against the women
who participate in protests and seek to break down
gender barriers and cultural taboos. Cyberactivists
also face intimidation and sexual harassment in the
virtual public sphere, as they become the subject of
virulent reputation assassinations and defamation
campaigns, and receive threats on their social media
profiles and blogs. Online defamation campaigns
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against women cyberactivists have been seen in
Bahrain and Tunisia as well as Egypt. As women
have come to play a central role in the uprisings,
they have also become a target of the regime, which
seeks to delegitimize their participation and calls for
political reform by disparaging them and raising the
potential costs of involvement.
In Egypt, for example, the police, security forces,
and thugs harassed and assaulted women during the
uprising, continuing the trend of targeting women
that goes back to at least 2005, when there was a
marked turn by the Egyptian government toward
the use of violence against women. During the
2005 demonstrations against a proposed constitutional amendment, gangs of men allegedly hired by
a member of the ruling National Democratic Party
(NDP) attacked women journalists, including cyberactivists like Nora Younis, and female journalists,
specifically targeting them in what Younis called a
“sexist approach.”16
“A woman is just a body and [the regime] felt
that a woman, she will never go back to the streets
and men would feel humiliated and not go out,” she
explained. But women stayed in the streets from
2005 onward, and during the protests were beaten
and tear-gassed just like everyone else. One woman
said the police were “particularly vicious to women.
They target us. I’ve had my veil pulled off by one
of them. In my own town of Menoufeya, a certain
police officer would tell women who got arrested,
‘You come in as virgins, and I’ll make sure you
leave as real women.’”17 Thugs attacked, beat, and
ripped the clothes off of professor Noha Radwan
during a mass demonstration in Cairo and killed
protester Sally Zahran by clubbing her with a baseball bat; police killed a woman named Amira and
ran over Liza Mohamed Hasan.18 Samira Ibrahim,
25, was the only one of at least seven women subjected to “virginity tests” by the military in spring
2011 who filed a case against her perpetrators.19
In December 2011, amateur mobile phone videos
captured the beating of a woman by Egyptian security forces, who tore off her abaya and exposed her
blue bra. Video and photos of the assault quickly
went viral and the “blue bra” girl became a symbol
of the continuing military repression and violence
against women as people tweeted and Facebooked
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the attack. U.S. journalist Lara Logan was sexually
assaulted while covering the protests in Tahrir, and
during the November 2011 parliamentary elections, Egyptian commentator Mona Eltahawy was
arrested and sexually assaulted by police. But rather
than remain silent, these women and their compatriots who lived to bear witness have taken to the airwaves and cyberspace to tell their stories, refusing
to back down. “Oppression begets solidarity,” one
woman in Tahrir astutely observed.
...
In Egypt, a group of volunteers created Harassmap,20 a crowdsource mapping project launched in
2010 to track incidents of sexual harassment in the
streets of Cairo by location, type, and frequency and
provide real-time information about areas women
should avoid, and to change attitudes toward the
problem in local communities.21 Many people used
this platform in the months following the uprising as sexual assaults became more common with
the breakdown in security. In 2010, draft legislation that would criminalize sexual harassment was
put in front of the Egyptian Parliament, but it was
dissolved and replaced in the post-Mubarak era.
Without the concerted effort by citizen journalists,
cyberactivists, and women’s rights organizations
to document these cases and bring attention to the
issue while building alliances with other concerned
groups in the human rights community, it seems
unlikely that Egypt would have made much progress
in either changing mindsets or legal frameworks.
PUBLIC SPHERE
The Middle East is highly patriarchal, although the
region varies in terms of women’s formal participation in the public sphere. In Egypt, Bahrain, and
Tunisia, women held parliamentary seats prior to
the revolution and participated in economic life. In
Yemen, Saudi Arabia, and Libya, however, women
were largely relegated to the home and not visible in
the public sphere. Mass participation by women in
street protests and political demonstrations was rare
if not unheard of prior to the 2011 uprisings, when
women young and old took to the streets across the
region, slept in the squares, and climbed atop of
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303
the shoulders of men to rally the public. Pictures of
middle-aged women tending their children in tents
and stories of older women refusing the youth’s
protestations to go inside where they would be safer
have become part of the revolutions’ story.
But while women were relatively less visible
in the streets and public squares prior to the Arab
uprisings, over the past several years, young women
have carved out a robust, participatory, and leadership role for themselves in cyberspace. In more
conservative societies, women were able to “leave
the confines of the four walls of her home,” as one
young Libyan put it, by going online, where they
could access information, communicate with people outside of their physical social circles (they
were often constrained by social mores and familial expectations from intermixing with men), and
engage in collective action, from “liking” a Facebook post to coordinating donations among friends.
“Cyberactivism has made activism on the street
more acceptable,” explained Yemeni activist Maria
al-Masani.
It also enabled young women in the more conservative countries of Libya and Yemen to participate in the revolutions because there are fewer
strictures on gender mixing and female comportment online, and anonymity is an option—whereas
it is not in most cities and villages, where extended
family ties mean that it can be difficult to escape
prying eyes and ears. Several Libyan and Yemeni
women said that cyberactivism empowered them to
be active in a way they could not be in the physical world. “Women are equal on the Internet,”
more than one person told me. “In cyberactivism,
men don’t get in physical contact with women, so
a lot of women are in cyberactivism because their
father says he would not want his daughter to go
to a demonstration, but if she’s anonymously online
then no one’s going to object to that,” explained
Mansani, in an observation echoed by several other
young women. An activist who wished to remain
anonymous said her cousins would object to her
cyberactivism, so she used a pseudonym; another
explained that they would use codes to discuss what
was happening on the ground in Libya because certain words like “NATO” were under surveillance.
Libyan activist Sarah al-Firgani said new media
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pushed women to get involved more. “They were at
home using Internet, they can speak freely and . . . it
changed the look of women in their community, the
men respect them more and see they have a role to
play to beyond family and children,” explained Firgani. “Women proved they can do what men can do,
some women did more than what many men did.”
...
The role of women in the public sphere has
inalterably shifted over the past several months as
women translated gains made in the virtual sphere to
the embodied public sphere, of which squares in the
capital cities were emblematic. Women participated
in the Arab uprisings and reconstituted the role and
position women occupy in the public sphere. While
some countries, like Bahrain, Egypt, and Tunisia,
had a handful of women parliamentarians prior to
the revolutionary uprisings, others like Yemen and
Saudi Arabia were virtual black holes in terms of
women’s public participation in the public sphere.
Similarly, in Bahrain, Yemen, and Saudi Arabia,
the virtual instantiations of contentious politics—
as well as the dialectic of the embodied and virtual
public spheres that reconstituted women’s role and
image in Arab politics and society—provided new
mechanisms for the articulation of their identities and brought new issues to the public agenda.
Although Arab states have highly variable rates of
Internet connectivity, social media—particularly
Facebook, Twitter, and YouTube—have become
central facets of young women’s daily lives. Even in
Yemen, where Internet penetration is a mere 10 percent, youth have clamored to join Facebook. “Everyone knows everyone else through Facebook,”
according to Yemeni blogger Afrah Nasser, noting
that it helped connect youth in various provinces so
that they could unite in the revolution.
...
Cyberactivism is both reflexive and reactive. For
many women, posting on Facebook or blogging
was the first time they had ever expressed their personal feelings publicly. Cyberactivism was a form
of empowerment, a way to exert control over one’s
personhood and identity, while gaining a sense of
being able to do something in the face of a patriarchal hierarchy and an authoritarian state. “People
are starting to say their views openly and freely
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because of social media, it has changed their mentality,” according to Afrah Nasser. As a blogger
named Israa explained in an interview prior to the
Egyptian uprising, blogging was “a way to spread
our ideas and concepts to people and make things
that can change our facts and conditions.” This sentiment was expressed by many women before, during, and after the revolutions. “The power of women
is in their stories. They are not theories, they are real
lives that, thanks to social networks, we are able
to share and exchange,” said Egyptian-American
activist Mona Eltahawy.
New and alternative media have given women
new tools for articulating their identity in the public
sphere, putting issues that were of particular concern to them onto the public agenda, and making
their opinions heard, from straightforward online
blogging platforms in the mid-2000s to mobile and
microblogging in 2007, to the explosive popularity of the social networking site Facebook by 2008.
Women have even made gains within the conservative Muslim Brotherhood, as evidenced by the recent
comments of Supreme Guide Mohamed Badie at an
Ikhwan press conference entitled “Woman: From
the Revolution to the Prosperity.” “No one can deny
the vital role the women played during the January 25 Revolution, whether as activists, mothers, or
wives,” he said in his opening speech, noting that
they “partook with men in everything.” Women,
he said, “made history, and with their success they
gave the whole world a lesson about how to fight
injustice and tyranny.”
...
POST-REVOLUTION: ORGANIZING, ELECTING,
AND PARTICIPATING
Zeinab al-Khawaja, best known by her Twitter handle @AngryArabiya, is another iconic figure who
has been active from the start of the uprising and
continues to push the limits of political expression
in Bahrain, earning her the wrath of the authorities
and the admiration of people around the world who
interact with her on Twitter. Her sister, Maryam
al-Khawaja, went into exile and shuttles between
Europe and Washington, D.C., as advocacy director
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of the Bahrain Centre for Human Rights, the leading human rights monitoring group in the country.
Their father was beaten, tortured, and sentenced to
life in prison at a sham military trial and eventually
went on a hunger strike that at this writing had been
going on for more than a month. Yet they both continue their advocacy, one from inside the country
and one from outside, using cyberactivism to ensure
the world does not forget about the ongoing protest
movement in Bahrain.
In Libya, women seem to be more active than
men in building civil society and, in particular,
using social media to do so. New nongovernmental
organizations, coalitions, and Facebook groups are
sprouting up everywhere to deal with problems as
local as the sewage in Lake Benghazi to those as
complicated as the issue of federalism and elections.
In many cases, young women said their organizations grew out of Facebook pages or groups they
started with friends.
Ibtihad, a 26-year-old activist from Tripoli who
was forced to leave Libya during the war, created
a Facebook page with her friends because she felt
she could not just sit and do nothing—she needed to
take action. They began to lay the groundwork for an
organization so that when she and her friends were
able to return to Libya, they would have the foundation for a registered NGO. The Facebook group,
which was open only to friends, adopted a policy of
complete transparency and democracy. The 100 or
so members of the group voted on everything, from
the name to the logo to the program of work. They
wrote a mission statement and bylaws, and when
she returned in August 2011 they registered their
new organization, which they named Phoenix, after
the bird that rises again from the ashes, and the Arabic term that refers to beauty. They raised money
from friends and acquaintances and posted an
accounting online with pictures of everything they
purchased with donated funds. After Ghaddafi’s
fall, as the country entered the transitional phase,
Phoenix created a fan page that was open to all and
took its online activism offline, holding information sessions and establishing a women’s resource
center. Such examples are common in Libya, where
the youth have been inspired to lead their country to
a better future in the post-Ghaddafi era. “We started
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305
Phoenix because our parents didn’t let us interact
with anyone, and we were just trying to help, so
we started this Facebook group and we started adding trusted friends” who had gone abroad to collect
donations of money and clothes, Ibtihad said.
Young women throughout the region agree that
a fundamental mind shift must take place in order
for women to make real gains, as for some women,
authoritarianism is experienced in the private as
well as the public sphere. Dalia Ziada underscored
the challenges that still remain in Egypt, noting that
a poll of more than 1400 people she helped conduct revealed that not a single one wanted to see a
woman president one day. In their personal lives,
young women must juggle their studies and family responsibilities (some of them are mothers and
wives), and negotiate cultural expectations about
women’s roles. Carving out time for cyberactivism
seems to have taken on more importance as social
media use expanded, and as the uprisings spread. . . .
The diminutive 15-year-old Arwa al-Taweel was
among the first Ikhwan sisters to create a blog in
2005, and helped pave the way for its members to
participate in the blogosphere, having encouraged
and trained dozens, if not hundreds, of her fellow
Ikhwan to blog, including several who participated
in the revolution. Her blog, Ana Keda—an expression that she translated as meaning something to the
effect of “That’s How I Am” or “I Am Enough”—
and later her tweets and Facebook updates became
a venue for political activism and articulation of
her Islamic faith and in many ways defined her,
she told me. She became known as a blogger and
cyberactivist, recognizable to strangers because
she posted a photo on her blog. Blogging was both
personal and political, but she shied away from the
public critique of the Ikhwan’s 2007 party platform
in favor of more personal reflections on life, love,
and poetry. But given her father’s reputation and her
own activism as a citizen journalist for Al Jazeera
Talk and Al Destor and her active support for Gaza,
the former could hardly be separated from the latter. In 2008 she told me she would refuse to stop
being a cyberactivist if and when she got married, a
promise she ended up keeping when she broke off
her engagement with a man who wanted her to stay
at home more often. Defying the traditional role of
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Muslim Sister as stay-at-home wife, she vowed to
travel and remain politically active, and last year
found a husband who would support her. In the
wake of the revolution she even professed an interest in running for parliament when she turned 30.22
The translation of online experiences and relationships into the “real world” blurred the lines
between public and private life, and provided new
and varied opportunities for women to expand their
circles and interact with people they never could
have otherwise. Such translation also contributed
to attempts to claim control over the articulation
of the female identity. Feminist reinterpretations
clashed with conservative traditionalists seeking to
maintain hegemonic control over the representation
of women and their proper roles in society. Blogs
and social media made the invisible visible, gave
voice to the voiceless, and embodied a commitment
to free expression and itjihad, or independent judgment. “This is a revolution of making our voice
heard,” said Afrah Nasser, noting that half of Yemen’s population is under 18. “We are now creating
a new form of political awareness in Yemen that
has never been talked about before, [a] new form of
politics,” she added, pointing out that the fact she
had been invited to speak at an international conference on Arab women and cyberactivism was proof
of such change. In her country, women played an
unprecedented leadership role in the uprisings, recognized by the awarding of the 2011 Nobel Peace
Prize to Yemeni journalist and human rights activist Tawakkol Karman for her role in inspiring the
democratic uprising in her country, which grew
from 20 women journalists who gathered to protest
the day Tunisia’s president Ben Ali fled the country
to tens of thousands in the weeks and months that
followed.
...
Women have carved out new spaces for
debate and discussion in the public sphere, both
physically and rhetorically, through activism on
the streets and online through agenda-setting and
framing as they erased red lines that had previously kept topics like torture, political succession,
and sexual harassment off limits. They are unlikely
to retreat from the public sphere no matter the outcome of the revolutions. . . .
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CONCLUDING THOUGHTS
Despite the region’s democratic uprisings, many
countries—including Bahrain, Saudi Arabia, Syria,
and Yemen—experienced backsliding in Freedom
House’s 2012 annual survey of political rights and
civil liberties because of crackdowns on pro-reform
activists. Tunisia was a bright spot in a region that
continues to rank among the least free in the world,
moving from “Not Free” to “Partly Free” on the
Freedom House 2012 survey amid the successful
democratic consolidation that took place in the
wake of Ben Ali’s ouster last year. Egypt continued to rank as “Not Free” amid continued repression by the ruling military power. Thus the struggle
to consolidate revolution and enact meaningful
reforms remains a challenge that young women will
continue to be involved in; they will undoubtedly
continue to use new media technologies to participate in and influence the future trajectory of their
countries.
The Arab Spring is not just a political revolution;
it is a social, sexual, and potentially religious one as
well. Women cyberactivists are upending traditional
hierarchies, reinterpreting religious dogma, breaking taboos, and bringing new issues into the public sphere even as they push to redefine the cultural
mores between public and private spheres.
The tension between privacy versus publicity,
activism versus journalism, professional versus
amateur, physical versus virtual, and conformity versus itjihad are at the epicenter of the revolutionary
transformations underway throughout the region.
Social media and the Internet enabled young women
to play a central role in the revolutionary struggles
underway in their countries, whether as revolutionaries, citizen journalists, or organizers. As Internet
access increases, as mobile phones are increasingly
able to connect online, and as social networking
expands, cyberactivism will continue to be a central form of contestation even as new platforms and
strategies develop. Ensuring that women receive
education and training, as well as expanding their
legal and political rights, will help consolidate the
sociopolitical gains of the Arab uprisings. With the
widespread recognition of the role young women
played in the uprisings, there is little doubt they will
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work to secure their role in the post-authoritarian
order that is in the process of emerging in the region.
REFERENCES
Bourdieu, Pierre. 1998. On Television. New York: New
Press, distributed by W.W. Norton.
El-Dahshan, Mohamed. 2011. Egyptian Women Eye
Revolutionary Role. Institute for War and Peace
Reporting.
Freedom on the Net. 2011. New York: Freedom House.
Kelly, Sanja and Julia Breslin, eds. 2010. Women’s Rights
in the Middle East and North Africa 2010: Progress
Amid Resistance. Lanham, MD: Freedom House.
Krahe, Dialika. 2011. “Visions of Female Identity in the New Egypt.” SpiegelOnline,
April 1. http://www.spiegel.de/international/
world/0,1518,druck-754250,00.html.
Radsch, Courtney. 2008. “Core to Commonplace: The
Evolution of Egypt’s Blogosphere.” Arab Media &
Society Fall, no. 6.
Radsch, Courtney C. 2012. “Bloggers & Believers:
Dynamics of Activism and Identity in the Muslim
Brotherhood.” In Information Evolution in the Arab
World, edited by Adel Iskander, Leila Hudson, and
Mimi Kirk. Washington, D.C.: Georgetown University Press.
NOTES
1. We spoke together in Denmark at a May 2011 conference titled “Cyberactivism Changing the World?”
2. Pierre Bourdieu, On Television (New York: New
Press: Distributed by W.W. Norton, 1998), 21.
3. See the home page of 3arabawy (blog), http://www
.arabawy.org/.
4. Lina Ben Mhenni, “Manifestation pour Sidi Bouzid,”
A Tunisian Girl (blog), December 25, 2010,
http://www.atunisiangirl.blogspot.com/2010/12/
manifestation-pour-sidi-bouzid.html.
5. Lina Ben Mhenni, “Sidi Bouzid Brule!” A Tunisian Girl (blog), December 19, 2010, http://www
.atunisiangirl.blogspot.com/2010/12/sidi-bouzidbrule.html.
6. Global Voices, “Tunisia: Unemployed Man’s
Suicide Attempt Sparks Riots,” December 23, 2010,
http://globalvoicesonline.org/2010/12/23/tunisiaunemployed-mans-suicide-attempt-sparks-riots/
7. Ibid.
8. Freedom House is a U.S.-based nongovernmental
advocacy group that conducts research on democracy, political freedom, and human rights.
sha27004_ch05_250_312.indd 307
C. RADSCH
307
9. Freedom on the Net (New York: Freedom House,
2011), 324; Internet Enemies (Paris: Reporters Sans
Frontières 2009).
10. The French term used for a female blogger.
11. Quoted in “Sidi Bouzid ou la révolte tunisienne
organisée sur Facebook,” Le nouvel observateur,
April 1, 2011, http://tempsreel.nouvelobs.com/vusur-le-web/20110104.OBS5680/sidi-bouzid-ou-larevolte-tunisienne-organisee-sur-facebook.html,
translation by the author.
12. Using Social Share of Voice to Anticipate Significant
Events (San Francisco: Topsy Labs, 2012), 4. Shareof-voice analysis measures the social volume of keywords mentioned on Twitter, in this case #Tunisia
compared to other MENA countries.
13. “Women Make Their Power Felt in Egypt’s
Revolution,” The National, 2011, http://www
.thenational.ae/news/worldwide/middle-east/
women-make-their-power-felt-in-egypts-revolution.
14. See Mohamed el-Dahshan, Egyptian Women Eye
Revolutionary Role (Institute for War and Peace
Reporting, 2011).
15. This is a procedure in which a woman is forcefully
penetrated to see whether she bleeds in order determine if she is a virgin. At least seven women in Egypt
were subjected to these “tests” by military officers
who were not doctors following their arrests in Tahrir
Square in March 2011.
16. Radsch, “Core to Commonplace,” 2008.
17. Mohamed El Dahshan, “Egyptian Women Eye Revolutionary Role,” Institute for War and Peace Reporting, March 8, 2011, http://iwpr.net/report-news/
revolutionary-role-egyptian-women.
18. Nadine Naber, “Imperial Feminism, Islamophobia,
and the Egyptian Revolution,” Jadaliyya, February 11, 2011, http://www.jadaliyya.com/pages/
index/616/imperial-feminism-islamophobia-and-theegyptian-re.
19. On March 15, 2012, a military tribunal acquitted
the army doctor accused of performing the so-called
virginity tests in a ruling seen by many civil society
activists as a setback for women’s rights, and for
human rights more generally.
20. See the Harassmap site at http://www.harassmap.org.
21. Author’s conversation with Injy Galal and Rebecca
Ciao, January 18, 2012, in Cairo.
22. Dialika Krahe, “Visions of Female Identity in the New
Egypt,” SpiegelOnline, 2011, http://www.spiegel.de/
international/world/0,1518,druck-754250,00.html.
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48
Bad Girl, Good Girl: Zines Doing Feminism
Alison Piepmeier (2009)
Grrrl zines don’t simply expose the dangers of
being a girl or woman in a patriarchal culture. They
also often engage with familiar configurations of
girlishness and femininity—playfully reclaiming
and reworking them. To a certain extent, this has
become an identifiable grrrl zine visual style: the
kinderwhore or “kitten with a whip” aesthetic, in
which girlish images are given a twist or are recontextualized in ways that change their meaning, making them tough or resistant.1 For example, Sarah
Dyer’s famous anarchist Hello Kitty became an
almost ubiquitous image in grrrl zines in the 1990s.
There are countless examples of this phenomenon,
from the celebration of children’s book protagonist Pippi Longstocking in numerous grrrl zines to
Cindy Crabb’s use of girlish doodles, such as hearts,
stars, and flowers, in conjunction with discussions
of weighty subjects such as sexual assault. . . .
These reframings of femininity are examples of
zines’ “insubordinate creativity,” and they function
as challenges to corporate culture industries that position girlhood in terms of passivity and consumption.
To be sure, many grrrl zines are fronting these
challenges in ways that embrace certain aspects
of femininity. Rather than simply rejecting sexist
culture, many zines are engaged in the project of
identifying the pleasures of femininity. This work
is sometimes seen as “not feminist enough” because
it can be understood as complicit with patriarchal
gender roles and, indeed, corporate culture; during
the early 1990s heyday of the Riot Grrrl movement,
“girl power” quickly became a marketing strategy,
even while it was being developed as a tool of resistance. Although I understand this sort of skepticism
about reclaiming femininity, I contend that this
skepticism can quickly lead to a flattening of feminist resistance. According to this approach, the only
appropriate feminist response to patriarchal tropes
of femininity is outright rejection. Bell hooks asks,
“How do we create an oppositional worldview, a
consciousness, an identity, a standpoint that exists
not only as that struggle which also opposes dehumanization but as that movement which enables
creative, expansive self-actualization?” She warns
that in these efforts, “Opposition is not enough.”2
Like hooks, these zines and their creators suggest
that a dichotomous framing of feminism’s gender
interventions, in which feminists are supposed to
voice monolithic opposition to corporate culture,
is inadequate. These zines are playing in the spaces
between resistance and complicity and as such are
creating third wave tactics.
One publication committed to the pleasures of
femininity is Bust which began as a zine but is now a
full-fledged professional magazine. Debbie Stoller,
Laurie Henzel, and Marcelle Karp started the zine
in 1993 because, as Stoller explained to me, they
wanted a publication that was like Sassy for adult
women. In particular, Stoller admired Sassy’s framing of girlhood as a positive space: “Whereas other
teen girl magazines were saying things like, you’re
gonna get breasts and boys are gonna want to touch
them and make sure they don’t. You know, Sassy
was kind of like, you’re gonna get breasts and if
someone touches them it’s gonna feel really good,
so pick a cute guy to do it, you know, just sort of
embracing, trying to really show the positive things
about being a teen girl and all the great new things
you could do as a teen girl . . . rather than pretending it was always in such a negative light.” She
was well aware of the dangers and vulnerabilities
that zines such as Mend My Dress (and magazines
such as Ms.) documented, but she was searching for
something different. She wanted Bust to create “an
embraceable feminist culture that’s positive, that
gives us stuff that we can relate to, to talk about how
difficult it is to be a woman and about how much
culture is misogynist, but I wanna just try to present
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an alternative, just try to create an alternative that
you can read and be happy and feel good about.”3
The pleasures of girlhood and womanhood have
been a theme in Bust since its inception. The publication has featured articles that celebrate such
stereotypically feminine acts as flirting, shopping,
developing your own sense of style, and lipstick.
However, Bust also tries to broaden the terrain of
fun for women, emphasizing the pleasures of more
stereotypically male activities such as nonmonogamous sex, physical aggression, and swearing. As
Bust demands pleasure for women, it also documents the cultural tension between appropriately
performed womanhood and female pleasure. For
instance, the second issue focused on fun, and the
editors’ letter offered the question, “As women, is it
even acceptable for us to want to have fun? . . . we
are expected to undergo a kind of pleasure-ectomy so
that we may become the selfless keepers of compassion, moderation, serenity, and responsibility that is
the definition of ‘womanhood.’”4 A few years later,
the editors upped the ante in the “Bad Girl” issue of
Bust, an issue that came to set the thematic course
for the publication. This issue discussed the pursuit
of pleasure, and the editors argued that what really
makes a bad girl bad is “simply doing the one thing
that is truly un-feminine: acting on your desires.”5
Bust leverages two available cultural categories—
the bad girl and the good girl—against each other,
and the good girl, the one who has experienced the
“pleasure-ectomy,” gets pushed off the page. The
bad girl becomes the primary iconographic terrain
for the publication.
The bad girl is an agent rather than simply an
object of desire, and Bust’s covers often highlight
this social identity. In so doing, however, they often
illustrate the tension between competing notions
of femininity, the fact that, as they noted in the
“Bad Girl” issue, “female badness seems to only be
acceptable as long as it remains attractive—as long
as it benefits someone else.6 The cover of the zine’s
second issue challenges this emphasis on the bad
girl as attractive. This cover features a cartoon of
a giant female dog (note: bitch) with bared breasts,
carrying a stereo, a beer, sex toys, movies, comics,
and junk food. She is stomping through a theme park
called “Fun City,” her booming feet crushing some
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of the tiny cartoon creatures below her who run for
cover. She is not particularly attractive—she is, in
fact, google-eyed, drooling, and dangerous—and
this is at least partly the point. She is not the typical woman’s magazine cover model, and therefore
she doesn’t function as an easily assimilable image
for women to aspire to become. The discomfort this
cover might produce in a reader is part of how zines
work, keeping the reader from the passive consumption mindset produced by mainstream capitalist
media.7 It functions more specifically in this case
to interrupt assumptions about femininity and force
the reader to consider how femininity and pleasure
interface.
Many other Bust covers enhance this tension,
as well, such as the cover of the first “Sex” issue,
which features a woman’s enormous pregnant stomach with the word “SEX” scrawled across it, in Riot
Grrrl fashion.8 This is the pregnant woman not as
beatific, sanitized symbol of maternal instinct but
as sexy, bikini-wearing, defiant girl, insurgent and
owning up to the act that led to the pregnancy in
the first place. Again, Bust celebrates the bad girl
as a figure who is so colorful and dramatic—even
uncomfortably so—that she completely overshadows and upstages the more familiar, palatable
models of appropriate femininity.
The Bust editors see celebrating femininity and
the pleasures of femininity as a tactical political
move. Stoller explained:
When men’s magazines were starting to come out,
like Details (there was no Maxim yet), there was
always emphasis in those magazines about men’s
pleasure and how fun it is to be a guy and all the
great things you can do as a guy, and so that was
very consciously an important part of what shaped
our ideas for how to do Bust, that we wanted it to
keep emphasizing the pleasures of being female
and feminist and making it feel like it was a great,
cool club to be a part of.9
Pleasure is an energy, a generative force and
a connective one. . . . Pleasure helps create the
embodied community of grrrl zines, and Bust is
using it intentionally, as a way to mobilize their
community of readers. Certainly, there are benefits for the publication: Bust grew from a zine to
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a magazine, in part, because the zine was fun to
read and it promoted consumer culture as part of the
enjoyment of being a woman. By the second year,
the publication was running with glossy color covers, and by the time I spoke with Stoller and Henzel
in 2006, they were selling nearly 100,000 copies per
issue, with around 22,000 going to subscribers and
the rest being sold in bookstores (the magazine is for
sale in major retailers such as Barnes and Noble and
Borders) and on newsstands. Even as it moved from
zine to magazine status, Bust maintained much of its
thematic focus—its celebration of the bad girl and
of female pleasures in general.
Its magazine format is necessarily less intimate
and inviting than the scruffy, informal publications
that readers identify as “a present in the mail,” and
this has had consequences for the way the publication
is perceived. One complication from Bust’s success
came in 1999, when the publication was bought out
by an Internet company that planned to grow the
magazine but, as it turned out, “they weren’t really
that interested in running a magazine so the magazine was losing money with them even though it
was looking great.” When the stock market began
to fall, the magazine’s owners decided to find other
investors to help grow Bust, but their big push for
investment began with an article in the New York
Times, which came out on September 10, 2001,
the day before the terrorist attacks in New York
City, Washington, D.C., and Pennsylvania. Stoller
explained, “and then that was really kind of the end
of it. Within a month, they closed the entire company down basically.10
Stoller, Henzel, and Karp were able to buy Bust
back from its owners, a move they decided to make
because they started receiving so many letters from
readers expressing their love for the publication and
asking what they could do to help. Stoller and Henzel explained what a frightening time that was: “We
had nothing except for [the rights to publish a magazine called Bust]. We had no money in the bank, no
money to publish the next magazine with,” but their
understanding of the publication and of their readership was so solid that, Stoller explained, “within
six months we were able to start paying ourselves
and our staff. Not very much at first, but it grew
and grew.”11 It’s worth noting here that, although
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Bust struggled financially due to their magazine status, they benefited from an embodied community of
readers who felt such attachment to the publication
that they helped bring it back from ruin.
Another complication the publication has faced
is that, as a successful, visible publication, Bust
has been a lightning rod for both praise and criticism from feminists and others in a way that seems
less likely within the smaller zine community. This,
however, is part of what Stoller was striving for
with Bust. She explained to me, “I never wanted it
to be some well-kept secret, some little underground
thing, cause that wasn’t the function, the function
was to reach as many people as possible and to have,
to try to have an actual cultural influence.”12 The
pleasures of womanhood became a successful marketing strategy for Bust as the pleasures of “being a
guy” were for men’s magazines like Maxim.
More than this, though, Bust’s deployment of
pleasure also helps alter the terrain of femininity,
not to mention feminism. Stoller explicitly identifies this intervention in the terrain of femininity as a
form of feminist activism: “I really believe that the
thing that is incredibly influential to the way we live
our lives and what restricts us and what we think
about ourselves is our culture and our values, and
that if you can change, those are the things that really
need to change.”13 It may be worth noting here that
one of the ways in which self-identified third wave
feminists have sought to distinguish themselves
from the second wave is via this emphasis on pleasure. Several grrrl zine creators said, on conditions of
anonymity, that reading more mainstream feminist
publications identified with the second wave, notably Ms. magazine, was akin to “eating your green
vegetables” or “doing your homework”—in other
words, not fun.14 Bust has made tactical interventions into mainstream notions of girlhood and womanhood using pleasure—the idea that it should be
fun to be a girl or a woman—as their barometer for
accepting or rejecting the parts of the culture with
which they come into contact.
Zines that reclaim femininity are sometimes identified as enacting a version of cultural feminism, but I
don’t think it’s useful to frame them in these terms.15
Cultural feminism, usually defined as a feminism
that celebrates women’s unique perspective, is a
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Bad Girl, Good Girl: Zines Doing Feminism | A LI S O N
somewhat outmoded category that doesn’t capture
the complexity of these zines’ gender interventions.
What these zines are doing is offering a contradictory stance: yes, girlhood and womanhood are dangerous, and, yes, they are culturally constructed for
particular political ends, but I can do something different with them and enjoy them. On the one hand,
this approach can be seen as politically suspect;
indeed, in earlier writing I myself have labeled it “the
feminist free-for-all” and have suggested that these
sorts of actions represent the bankrupting of feminist politics.16 But I question that stance now. Just
because these zines don’t offer a coherent political
standpoint, just because they don’t fully undermine
mainstream gender performances, doesn’t mean
that they are complicit with cultures of domination.
Again, I stress that the binary of resistant/complicit
is inadequate to the task of assessing these zines (or
texts more generally). In fact, I think the incompleteness I see in these zines, their “yes, but” approach to
feminism and femininity, represents a valid theoretical stance, a tactical subjectivity that’s keyed to this
cultural moment and is characteristically third wave.
This “yes, but” approach encodes resistance
and attempts to move the feminist discussion of
female subjectivities beyond opposition. Johnson
suggests that many young feminist scholars—and
I would extend her insight to many grrrl zinesters
as well—are so familiar with the discourses critical
of racism, sexism, and homophobia that they do not
mention them. She argues: “Our redirection does not
constitute a turning away from . . . skepticism and critique . . . but a thoroughgoing acceptance of skepticism and critique as the givens of our approach,
joined with a desire to go beyond them.”17 This is
obviously not to say that young feminists or grrrl
zinesters see racism, sexism, homophobia, or other
oppressive systems as being gone; in fact, just the
opposite. The cultural critique of these systems
is the foundation on which they are building, but
they don’t necessarily stay in that space of critique,
choosing, rather, to generate alternative subject
positions and to tap into the pleasures of creation
and cultural intervention.
There are potential problems with this approach,
of course. One of the concerns regularly raised
about third wave feminists is that, having come to
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consciousness in a hyperindividualistic backlash culture, they often don’t recognize pervasive problems
or know how to address them. A related concern is
that white zinesters, who make up the majority of
those producing zines, often give only lip service to
racism, ultimately replicating societal hierarchies
around race and ethnicity. Ultimately, though, I think
it would be reductive (and condescending) to understand the celebration of femininity and pleasure as
merely a form of false consciousness or denial. Better to take seriously the desire to create what Stoller
calls “an embraceable feminist culture that’s positive,” a desire that helps animate a community.
NOTES
1. Lily Burana, “Grrrls, Grrrls, Grrrls,” Entertainment
Weekly 429 (May 1, 1998), 76.
2. bell hooks, Yearning: Race, Gender, and Cultural Politics (Boston: South End Press, 1990), 15.
3. Debbie Stoller, personal interview.
4. Letter to the Editor, Bust, 1.2 (fall 1993), 2.
5. Editorial, Bust 7 (spring/summer 1996), 2.
6. Ibid.
7. Duncombe, Notes from Underground, 123.
8. Bust 1.4 (summer/fall 1994).
9. Stoller, personal interview.
10. Ibid.
11. Ibid.
12. Ibid. Circulation information from personal correspondence and Bust media kit, http://www.bust.com/
2008mediakit.pdf. Interestingly, while Stoller always
envisioned Bust as a magazine, Henzel, who has been
the publication’s creative director from the beginning, explained to me, “for the design part, I wasn’t
looking at real magazines as inspiration, I was really
looking at zines. I was a big zine reader, so it had that
feel because that’s what I like. Obviously the early
issues didn’t look kind of the way they do now, and
I wasn’t looking at Vanity Fair and saying ‘oooh,’ it
was a zine in my mind” (Henzel, personal interview).
13. Stoller, personal interview.
14. Personal interviews with four zine creators who asked
not to be identified.
15. Kearney (Girls Make Media), in particular, labels
grrrl zines in terms of cultural feminism.
16. Rory Dicker and Alison Piepmeier, “Introduction” to
Catching a Wave: Reclaiming Feminism for the 21st
Century, ed. Dicker and Piepmeier (Boston: Northeastern University Press, 2003), 17.
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17. Merri Lisa Johnson, “Introduction: Ladies Love Your
Box—The Rhetoric of Pleasure and Danger in Feminist Television Studies,” in Third Wave Feminism
and Television: Jane Puts It in a Box, ed. Johnson
(New York: I. B. Tauris, 2007), 13
DISCUSSION QUESTIONS FOR CHAPTER 5
1. How do you think cultural forms shape gender? How might cultural forms function subversively to
challenge traditional gender norms?
2. How is television an example of what Susan Douglas calls “enlightened sexism”? Give specific examples from current TV shows. How do these shows focus viewers’ gaze away from continuing barriers to
women’s equality?
3. What pitfalls and possibilities do social media offer young women? How might social media be used for
feminist activism?
4. How does pornography as a cultural form influence gender norms in U.S. society? How does race
intersect with gender in pornography’s representation of women?
5. Why do you think some critics suggest there has never been a female Shakespeare or a female da Vinci?
Do you agree with this assessment? Why or why not?
SUGGESTIONS FOR FURTHER READING
Brake, Deborah. Getting in the Game: Title IX and the Women’s Sports Revolution. New York: New York
University Press, 2010.
Carson, Mina, Tisa Lewis, and Susan M. Shaw. Girls Rock! Fifty Years of Women Making Music.
Lexington: University Press of Kentucky, 2004.
Dolan, Jill. The Feminist Spectator in Action: Feminist Criticism for the Stage and Screen. New York:
Palgrave Macmillan, 2013.
Halberstam, J. Jack. Gaga Feminism: Sex, Gender, and the End of Normal. Boston: Beacon Press, 2012.
Jones, Amelia, ed. The Feminism and Visual Culture Reader, Second Edition. New York: Routledge, 2010.
Lee, Shayne. Erotic Revolutionaries: Black Women, Sexuality, and Popular Culture. Lanham, MD:
Hamilton Books, 2010.
Karlyn, Kathleen Rowe. Unruly Girls, Unrepentant Mothers: Redefining Feminism on Screen. Austin:
University of Texas Press, 2011.
Radner, Hilary, and Rebecca Stringer. Feminism at the Movies: Understanding Gender in Contemporary
Popular Cinema. New York: Routledge, 2012.
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